Rife Machine: Has anyone heard of or used... - My MSAA Community

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Rife Machine

DIsneyQueen profile image
18 Replies

Has anyone heard of or used a Rife machine for their MS? It is a healing modality that uses radio frequency waves to treat various illnesses. Each illness has a code you program in. This machine was developed in the 1950s. If you have heard of or use it, do you use other codes besides the specific MS code?

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DIsneyQueen profile image
DIsneyQueen
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18 Replies
Jesmcd2 profile image
Jesmcd2CommunityAmbassador

I had to look it up DIsneyQueen as I had never heard of it.

Personally I wouldn't use it. In just 3 articles that I checked, there I NOTHING that says it would work. Anyone can make them, which means, they can be dangerous. (Electric shock, rash) And give you a false sense of security.

But that's me!😊

Ask your Neuro about it!!!!! Before you get one Please!!!

🤗💕🌠

Ruadh profile image
Ruadh in reply to Jesmcd2

No. Incorrect, Not 'anyone' can make them - if they tried they would wrap it round their left neck ! Please do not confuse with a Tens machine. The Rife is around $7,500 K. That is with a discount, otherwise, $9,999 K.

6092177588 profile image
6092177588 in reply to Jesmcd2

I agree. Have you had a simulator insert trial yet?

greaterexp profile image
greaterexp

I would be extremely suspicious. I highly doubt that this would have any effect except to lighten your wallet.

Ruadh profile image
Ruadh

Yes. Have heard of it. Royal Rife was the inventor. Know of persons who use, has been found to be efficacious. Big problem is, that there are many copy cats, and the the machines they sell are substandard.

Suggest you check out Royal Rife. The inventor.

All the he original machines were all smashed up - the pharmaceutical industry were wetting themselves in case the Rife machine was going to take the world by storm !

Only parts of one original machine were rescued, and the collaborator with Royal Rife was painstakingly able to put together again, but was not to compare with the original machine. The FDA stepped in and banned its use in America.

However, other countries stepped up to the plate ; Canada (I believe) and South Africa.

The Rife has been worked on since, and yes, it can work. Is expensive, and takes focus to adapt to its intricacies, and you do need the bits to 'add on', i.e. the mat, and there was summat else, but forget what. Those whom I have come across speak highly of using it.

The whole story of Royal Rife is an indictment against pharma and the medical establishment.

Too expensive for me to even contemplate - and, I did look in to it very carefully, a few years ago now. But, IF intending going for it, please be careful, as, in far too many cases one is dealing with substandard look alikes...IOW, a bigtime, expensive, Ho-Hum. Sadly, No. I am unable to lead you to a reliable source.

Dr Royal Raymond Rife - DOB: 16 March 1888 - 5 Aug 1971 = 83 yrs of age.

American inventor and early exponent of high-magnification time-lapse cine-micrography.

There is a rare documentary about him. He was a genius. Died, slated and in poverty.

BettysMom profile image
BettysMom in reply to Ruadh

The machine must have been very powerful if Dr. Rife lived to be 283 years old.

Ruadh profile image
Ruadh in reply to BettysMom

Amusing B'mom... me finger exercises aint wot they used ta be !! :)

Dr Royal Raymond Rife - DOB: 16 March 1888 - 5 Aug 1971 = 83 yrs of age - WIKI if you go by WIKI !!

BettysMom profile image
BettysMom in reply to Ruadh

Thanks for the correction!

DIsneyQueen profile image
DIsneyQueen

Too expensive for me, but a friend of mine bought it for her husband who had a very elevated PSA. He has used it for several years and took no meds for prostate cancer and his PSA practically zero, and Dr has found no signs of cancer remaining. He has done a lot of research into using it for my MS also. I really appreciate your feedback.

ahrogers profile image
ahrogers in reply to DIsneyQueen

Not sure about your friends husbands whole story but the PSA can be elevated by things other than cancer such as a prostate infection and then return to normal. There are also supplements that can affect PSA levels. Prostate cancer is usually very slow growing which is why some people don't get treatment and just have their PSA checked periodically for changes and periodic MRIs or biopsies to check the status.

rjoneslaw profile image
rjoneslaw

never heard of it

ck722 profile image
ck722

Stay away from the Rife machine. It is rife with fraud! Stay alive. Read:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal...

Ruadh profile image
Ruadh

WIKI is supported by pharma, is left open-ended, and responded to by the skewed science buffs. WIKI was originally based on good provenance, but now.... Tis sad indeed !

Always do your own research. Check it out, follow up and do not be pushed aside.

jorrell profile image
jorrell

Personally having suffered from something iffy like this, although 50 years later. If I saw one I'd smash it to bits. My experience was a little different, it lasted about two years around the end of the 60s. They were orthopedic correction shoes for children. Keep in mind that parents were driven through fear and joyful outcomes via TV and print to get these corrective shoes, if anything as a status sign. You could call it a "craze" if you like with no sci evidence to back it up. I wound up with all the large bones in the foot near the ankle fused. I even have bunions as a result although I never wore pointy shoes (yeah, I'm a guy, never wore pointy boots or high heal fashion shoes. Keep in mind that towards the end of Mr. Rife's life, they were using outrageous xray machines in shoe stores. The radiation these thing put out wound up in cancer and amputations. No science behind that either, it wasn't even used to see what shoe would fit, it was a gimmick! Stepping down off of soap box now....

DIsneyQueen profile image
DIsneyQueen in reply to jorrell

Thanks to everyone for your responses. Greatly appreciated

ck722 profile image
ck722

If the Rife machine worked, you would see add-on attachments for your microwave oven so you could zap yourself into oblivion.

The Rife machine makes no sense in these days of EMF hysteria.

Frances_B profile image
Frances_B

From what I've read it sounds like a perfect match for being something cooked up by the Church of Scientology. Here - hold these handles and watch the BS meter wobble around. I'll file it in the same bins as:

•Cayce's Battery ( skeptoid.com/episodes/4089 )

•The all-fruit diet which claims to cure everything

•Aspartame supposedly being responsible for an “epidemic” of MS and lupus - the warning message about that has been circulating for more than 20 years now and is still doing the rounds ( snopes.com/fact-check/aspar... )

•The theory that all Big Pharma companies and every MS Society is in cahoots to prevent a cure for every being found for MS as if one was found these organisations would all go out of business. (conspiracy theories never stop coming..... sigh)

•And last but not least – the “Medical Medium” – who claims that he “was born with the unique ability to converse with the Spirit of Compassion, who provides him with extraordinarily accurate health information that's far ahead of its time.”

The really sad part about all these ridiculous theories is that vulnerable and desperate people get sucked into believing this crap, and can end up doing themselves harm.

ck722 profile image
ck722

I like the ice cream diet where you swamp your body with extremely high levels of fats and sugar to kill off anything bad inside you. It only works if you eat 3 gallons a day. Ready for the challenge?

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