www.rife.org/planet.htm
    The newspaper article provided here was included in a newpaper called 
The 
    Planet and published February 1986 in Washington, D.C. It was 
delivered 
    to every member of the U.S. House of Representatives and every member 
    of the United States Senate. Not one representative, senator or staff assistant 
    was motiviated sufficiently to investigate further.
    
    The newspaper was also provided free to the George Washington University Medical 
    School students and professors. Again, 
not one was motivated to investigate 
    further.
    
    All while 7,000 to 10,000 Americans died weekly from cancer!
    Good examples of public irresponsibility from people in positions of public 
    trust or professions with public trust implied! Shame!
    
    Barry Lynes September 25, 1999
    
"The Cancer Cure That Worked: The Rife Report" was published 
      in April 1987, 14 months after the U.S. Congress turned its back on Rife 
      and ignored an incredible opportunity to "jump start" the Rife 
      revival.
    
    The Planet
    The cure for cancer was covered up. Treatment suppressed since 1930s
    (Reprinted with permission from Barry Lynes) 
    
It has been a secret for many years - more than 50 years in fact. 
      It is a secret that is a shame of the medical profession and another example 
      of complacent press, another example of a scientific conspiracy that resembles 
      more a medieval guild protecting its financial interests than a profession 
      dedicated to public service, and another example of a political system afraid 
      to promote the public good when it clashed with powerful elites.
    This story also demonstrates how apathetic, asleep, cowardly and unwilling 
      so many individuals, especially the self-righteous "new agers," 
      actually are when given the opportunity to take real initiatives which could 
      rectify monstrous wrongs.
    The secret is the cancer cure.
    Before detailing this fundamental wrong, it is important to emphasize what 
    
50 years of covering up a cancer cure has meant in terms of suffering. 
    Almost every family in America has been touched by the horror of lingering 
    deaths by cancer. Those who haven't been directly affected have known neighbors 
    and friends who have been the victims of both the disease and the arrogant 
    scientists, government bureaucrats and financial elites who are responsible. 
    Children have been among the many millions who have not only been abandoned 
    to cancer's excruciating pain and protracted terror, but to existing, stupid, 
    torturous, experimental procedures which don't work. In a word, the American 
    medical and political "establishment" are guilty of gross misconduct.
    
    Our nation is premised upon democratic procedures, checks and balances, competition, 
    and the correction of abuses through open discussion which lead to institutional 
    change. In the matter of this 
50 year old cancer cure, all of the above 
    have not worked. The cancer cure was suppressed. Agencies, both public and 
    private, were not responsive. The cost in human lives and wasted resources 
    has been staggering. A Vietnam War, the countless annual deaths in automobile 
    accidents, or' the lives prematurely ended because of inferior nutrution caused 
    by poverty together cannot match the number who have died horribly because 
    America's culture could not expose and then break the vested interests which 
    perpetrated this crime. And if Colorado Governor Lamm's figures are correct, 
    
one-third of Americans now living will die of cancer in the future. 
    Americans tion of committed scientitst, and to promote the needed public education. 
    So perhaps finally - if enough of us insist on it - America's institutional 
    ability to correct this outrage can be demonstrated. But don't hold your breath. 
    Without a major, on-going, public commitment and a national authority to oversee 
    the effort and report regularly on the progress being made, it is unlikely 
    that swift, significant remedies will occur.
    
    In another article in this issue 
(The Timid Press, Page 1), syndicated 
    columnist Mary McGrory's acceptance speech upon receiving the Lovejoy journalism 
    award is reported. In that talk, Ms. McGrory advocated that readers read their 
    papers "with the idea of doing something." In a similar vein, the 
    article on the changing weather and the scientific cover up involved, science 
    philosopher Paul Feyerabend is quoted when he calls for "duly elected 
    committees of laymen" to judge the efforts and recommendations of scientists.
    
    Certainly, if anything deserves both the individual reader's commitment as 
    well as participation in oversight committees, it is the investigation into 
    this cancer cure and the development of procedures to bring this cancer cure 
    into practical use as fast as possible.
    
    This story is somewhat technical, but the complicated scientific details will 
    be omitted in order that you, the reader, can grasp the essentials. The specifics 
    can be checked elsewhere and it is hoped that enough of you --including experts 
    capable of initiating action will do so. A mobilization is required, for not 
    only 
cancer. but 
AIDS and many other diseases threatening us 
    are potentially capable of being eradicated if we, the people of the United 
    States, get off our collective asses.
    
    In the 1920s a scientist-inventor named Royal Raymond Rife invented a new 
    kind of microscope. In an article Ne
w Age Journal March produced little 
    from 
New readers), the story of Rife's cancer cure was detailed. Since 
    then, Rife has been nominated for the "Alternative Nobel Prize" 
    which is annually awarded in Europe as a protest to the more established, 
    less risk taking Swedish honor. Yet, little notice of Rife and his miraculous 
    discovery has infiltrated the establishment consciousness.
    
    Rife's microscope was a stunning advance. Unlike the electron microscope, 
    Rife's microscope 
made it possible to study "living" bacteria, 
    viruses, and so forth. An electron microscope kills its specimens. Rife's 
    remarkable breakthrough used a new approach to bend light. As a result, Rife 
    was able to prove that bacteria could change their form. In effect, they could 
    become cancer causing viruses.
    
    Rife then implanted his cancer-causing bacteria into rats. Tumors subsequently 
    developed. From here, Rife made the startling discovery that the 
bacteria 
    could change into a completely different form if the "medium on which 
    they were living" was slightly altered. In other words, Rife's cancer 
    causing substance was, in some forms and in association with some environments 
    within the body, deadly. But in other forms and in other environments, benign. 
    His cancer causing substance could be changed back and forth from one to the 
    other. The implications of this discovery are obvious. Cancer cells 
might 
    be transformed to healthy cells again!
    
    Rife then began beaming different frequencies of light on these microorganisms. 
    Up until the early 
1950s, Rife perfected this method. As Christopher 
    Bird reported in the New 
Age article, "many lethal those of tuberculosis, 
    typhoid, leprosy... appeared to disintegrate or 'bIow up' in the field of 
    his microscope." This "death ray" was applied to cancers in 
    rats. It worked!
    
    The next step was humans. The result? Here is Rife's report: "The first 
    clinical work on cancer was completed under the supervision of Milbank Johnson, 
    M.D., which was setup under a special medical research committee of the University 
    of Southern California. Sixteen cases were treated at the clinic for manv 
    tvpes of malignancy. After three months, fourteen of these so-called hopeless 
    cases were signed off as clinically cured by a staff of medical doctors and 
    Alvin G. Foord, M. D., pathologist for the group.
    
    Throughout the 1930's, Rife and associates continued their work. In 1940, 
    Arthur W. Yale, M.D. reported that Rife's discoveries were an entirely new 
    theory of the origin and cause of cancer, and the treatment and results have 
    been so unique and unbelievable" that we may be able to "eliminate 
    the second largest cause of deaths in the United States."
    
  
      But it was not to be!
    
    There were powerful doctors whose careers were based on the theory that bacteria 
    could not change its form. Rife's discovery threatened their status and their 
    own research. (It was like the invention of the automobile for a horse-drawn 
    carriage driver.)
    
    One of these "authorities" was Dr. Thomas Rivers of the Rockefeller 
    Institute. Another was Harvard microbiologist Dr. Hans Zinsser. The cancer 
    cure was killed by the powerful.
    
    One of Rife's supporters, Dr. Edward C. Rosenow, a pioneer bacteriologist, 
    sadly commented at the end of his life, "They simply won't listen."
    
    Others have followed Rife and have 
confirmed different aspects of his theory, 
    but since they are few in number and are promoting a cause contrary to the 
    medical establishment's approved philosophy, they are not supported. Even 
    publishing their findings is difficult if not impossible because of the dominant 
    medical orthodoxy which has reigned 
since the 1930s!
    
    Christopher Bird's 
1976' New Age Journal article contained a, 
    summation of the 
political coverup as perceived by the Lee Foundation 
    of Nutritional Research in Milwaukee. According to Bird, the Lee Foundation 
    "maintains that Rife, his microscope and his life work were tabooed by 
    Ieaders in the U.S. medical profession and that any medical doctor who made 
    use of his practical discoveries was stripped of his privileges as a member 
    of the local medical society."
    
    The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) still bans treatments similar to those 
    of Rife.
    
    And how many millions of dollars are annually "invested" in the 
    establishment's preferred quackery and toururous gimmicks?
    
    Those interested in pursuing this matter, which as a first step means forming 
    a national committee of scientists, administrators, "can-do-types" 
    and laymen to monitor and 
correct this crime are encouraged to contact 
    
The Planet. Perhaps citizen action is not entirely dead in this country 
    yet.
    
    Or have we truly lost our nerve, our fighting spirit, and our 1776 contempt 
    for aristocracy assuming dictatorial rights over our bodies and minds?
    
    Barry Lynes