Saturday, March 14, 2020

Medicine of the Future


Luc Antoine Montagnier is a French virologist and joint recipient with Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Harald zur Hausen of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). In the past decade Dr. Montagnier has been working on encoding various frequencies into water. One of his more profound experiments was that he took a blood sample of an HIV positive patient and diluted it seven times with 100 parts of water each time to get a 1:100,000,000,000,000 dilution of the patient's blood.

When he ran a chromatographic analysis of the sample in a vial, it showed there was nothing remaining but water in the vial. After using a recording array, he saved its frequencies to a digital file, then emailed that file to a colleague at the Polytechnic Institute in Italy. In Italy his colleague played those frequencies back into another vial of pure water, then used a thing called a polymerase chain reactor to reconstitute genetic material for things that are missing. It is a technique for amplifying DNA sequences in vitro by separating the DNA into two strands and incubating it with oligonucleotide primers and DNA polymerase. It can amplify a specific sequence of DNA as many as one billion times and is important in biotechnology, forensics, medicine, and genetic research.

When this was done in Italy, 1500 kilometers away, it reconstituted the patient's genetic material with 98 percent accuracy. Montagnier's work begs questions about what DNA really is and how closely tied to frequency all living forms are.

This type of science is, without question, redefining the medicine of the future. When you have one wave of a certain frequency and apply to it the appropriate counter wave, which is 180 degrees out of phase, they cancel each other out in a nodal interface. If you could take the frequencies that you are deficient in, then just add the proper frequency, you'd be fixed. If you have some vector of disease that is making you sick, you just zap your body with a radio wave of the disease's counter frequency, and presto, you are all better. Unfortunately, under the Big Pharma paradigm that we all live under, there's no profit for such a strategy.

When I was a young man in college in 1970, I came across a story out of Maryland in which a scientist in the early 1960's was testing these same ideas. He took a collection of printed aerial photographs of corn fields that were infected with a particular variety of corn borer that was damaging the crop. Taking scissors, he cut squares out of the different photographs, eliminating a representation of a certain area of the corn field from the photographs.Taking a simple, inexpensive crystal radio from Radio Shack, he was able to emit whatever radio waves that he wanted, up and down the frequency band. Knowing that every living thing has a unique identifiable frequency, he determined the frequency of the culprit corn borer, then adjusted his radio to choose a frequency that was precisely 180 degrees out of phase with that of the corn borer.

In his laboratory, he zapped the cut-out photographs of the corn fields with radio waves of the corn borer's opposite frequency. To test the effects, he subsequently visited each corn field whose cut-out photograph was zapped to discover that ALL corn borers were killed in the part of each field photographed, except for the areas he cut out. The part of each field representing the cut-out areas of corn that were not zapped back in the lab were still infected with corn borers. Continuing his experiment, he flew over different corn fields, using his  crystal radio from a reasonable altitude above the corn fields, and was able to effect the same result when he broadcast the counter frequency – killing all corn borers throughout each field that was zapped.

Federal authorities moved in and made his intriguing work disappear under the guise of national security. The reason given, at the time, was that if it was that easy to kill a bug, it may be just as easy to kill your next door neighbor or your ex-wife and so on. The government, once again, stepped in to protect us from ourselves. Upon further inquiry I learned that the military, ours and theirs, have been successfully using frequency warfare since World War II. Thank you, Adolf Hitler, for your initial research.

There is still incredible, unexploited value in the idea, however. The future may very well involve such technology that is as inexpensive as a child's radio, standard in every home, but regulated, that can immediately tell us at no cost what we are deficient in and just fix it by applying the correct frequency to restore balance. Believe it or not, the tech already exists and has for decades, and costs only pennies. Remember the tricorder on Star Trek that the ship's physician, Bones, used on every patient?  Something to look forward to!

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