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ROYAL RAYMOND RIFE & THE CANCER CURE THAT WORKED! California, a group of leading American bacteriologists and doctors conducted the first I: the summer of 1934 in California, under the auspices of the University of Souther successful cancer clinic. The results showed that: More than just a cancer cure, Rife's discovery pointed to anew understanding of what we have mistakenly termed ‘the germ theory’. a) cancer was caused by a micro-organism; b) the micro-organism could be painlessly destroyed in terminally ill cancer patients; and c) the effects of the disease could be reversed. The technical discovery leading to the cancer cure had been described in Science maga- zine in 1931. In the decade following the 1934 clinical success, the technology and the subsequent, successful treatment of cancer patients was discussed at medical conferences, disseminated in a medical journal, cautiously but professionally reported in a major news- paper, and technically explained in an annual report published by the Smithsonian Institution. However, the cancer cure threatened a number of scientists, physicians, and financial interests. A cover-up was initiated. Physicians using the new technology were coerced into abandoning it. The author of the Smithsonian article was followed and then was shot at while driving his car. He never wrote about the subject again. All reports describing the cure were censored by the head of the AMA (American Medical Association) from the major medical journals. Objective scientific evaluation by government laboratories was prevented. And renowned researchers who supported the technology and its new scientif- ic principles in bacteriology were scomed, ridiculed, and called liars to their face. Eventually, a long, dark silence lasting decades fell over the cancer cure. In time, the cure was labelled a ‘myth'—it never happened. However, documents now available prove that the cure did exist, was tested successfully in clinical trials, and in fact was used secretly for years afterwards—continuing to cure cancer as well as other diseases. In 19th century France, two giants of science collided. One of them is now world- renowned—Louis Pasteur. The other, from whom Pasteur stole many of his best ideas, is now essentially forgotten—Pierre Béchamp. One of the many areas in which Pasteur and Béchamp argued concerned what is today known as pleomorphism—the occurrence of more than one distinct form of an organism in a single life cycle. Béchamp contended that bacteria could change forms. A rod- shaped bacterium could become a spheroid, etc. Pasteur disagreed. In 1914, Madame Victor Henri of the Pasteur Institute confirmed that Béchamp was correct and Pasteur wrong. But Béchamp went much further in his argument for pleomorphism. He contended that bacteria could ‘devolve’ into smaller, unseen forms—what he called microzyma. In other words, Béchamp developed—on the basis of a lifetime of research—a theory that micro- organisms could change their essential size as well as their shape, depending on the state of health of the organism in which the micro-organism lived. This directly contradicted what orthodox medical authorities have believed for most of the 20th century. Laboratory research in recent years has provided confirmation for Béchamp's notion. This seemingly esoteric scientific squabble had ramifications far beyond academic insti- tutions. The denial of pleomorphism was one of the cornerstones of 20th century medical research and cancer treatment. An early 20th century acceptance of pleomorphism might have prevented millions of Americans from suffering and dying of cancer. In a paper presented to the New York Academy of Sciences in 1969, Dr Virginia Livingston and Dr Eleanor Alexander-Jackson declared that a single cancer micro-organ- ism exists. They said that the reason the army of cancer researchers couldn't find it was Extracted from the book The Cancer Cure That Worked! by Barry Lynes Published by Marcus Books PO Box'327, Queensville, Ontario, Canada ISBN 0-919951-30-0 Available from Sydney Esoteric Bookshop NEXUS®25 BACTERIA AND VIRUSES OCTOBER - NOVEMBER 1993