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PARASITE ELIMINATION USING THE ELECTRIC CARBON ARC LAMP PARASITE ELIMINATION UsING THE CARBON ELECTRIC ARC LAMP A century-old technology and health treatment, utilising high-energy, full-spectrum vibratory light, ts being employed to destroy nasty parasites including tapeworms. adiant energy was used extensively in medicine around the beginning of the 20th century with the advent of Finsen's filtered ultraviolet carbon arc lamp, for which Niels Finsen received the 1903 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. Clinics popped up throughout Europe that treated rickets, tuberculosis and a host of other diseases successfully by way of precisely timed exposures to outdoor sunlight and indoor broad-spectrum light produced by the electric carbon arc lamp and, later, the narrow-spectrum mercury vapour UV light emitters. Up until about 1935, carbon arc lamps and mercury vapour lamps were in wide use throughout the medical community because of the unique ability of light to create changes in the chemistry of the body fluids which stimulate the immune system, thus producing a powerful pathogen-devitalising environment. The effects were not just topical; the lamps created responses deep inside the body, far away from the points of initial illumination. Many diseases responded well to the treatments without the dangerous side effects of the poisonous, chemical-based drugs that were soon to follow on the timeline of medical evolution. As medicine became organised as a result of the powers of the emerging pharmaceutical industry with its new sulphur-based drugs, the use of illuminative radiant energy in the treatment of disease quickly disappeared from the medical scene. The energy technology of radiant light illumination was far more effective than the chemical drugs but not as profitable, hence actinotherapy, as it was called, rapidly fell out of use. With the advent of medical licensing and the subsequent threat of de- certification, physicians who continued to use the proven technology risked losing their licence to practise medicine, hence the reason why full-spectrum light treatments are not widely used today and why few practitioners have ever heard of this remarkable healing technology. Doctors of today are clueless about this technology; if told of it, they would likely baulk at it and dismiss it as quackery. Nothing, however, could be further from the truth. This technology is an important relic of medical history, and these doctors would be awestruck to learn of the extensive healing potency it provided. Yet, by the ordained decree of medical politics, this energy technology remains a taboo in the profession and thus beyond reach. The public has been conditioned to believe that somehow energies from the Sun or its approximates is somehow dangerous and that such exposures should be limited or avoided altogether. However, this fear of nature is a recent occurrence which parallels the expansion of information technologies and mass advertising. Protective clothing, lotions and eyewear of uncountable varieties have all been the result of clever advertising for the purpose of making money for the manufacturers, not to mention for the relatively new class of doctors who specialise specifically in dermatology. If the truth be known that sunlight is good for us and lack of it is harmful, sales would not be nearly as brisk as they now are and many practitioners would be forced to learn a new medical speciality. When the baby-boomer generation was growing up, we never heard of such a preposterous assumption that sunlight was bad for us and we ran around half naked and without sun-blocking our skin with oils—which, at that time, had no light-filtering capabilities. Can you recall anyone you knew developing skin cancer? Or any cancer for that matter? It's true that the incidence of skin cancer, as well as other forms of cancer, has been on a marked increase over the last half-century, but to blame it on the Sun is ridiculous. Website: http:/Awww.kootiekiller.us JUNE — JULY 2006 NEXUS = 33 by Carmi B. Hazen © 2006 www.nexusmagazine.com