Thursday, 21 February 2013

Zapping Bugs


Zapping Bugs

By zapping I mean selectively electrocuting pathogens. For
years I used a commercial frequency generator to “zap” one
pathogen after another.
First I made a chart of the frequencies for most of the bacteria
and viruses in my collection (over 80, see page 561). Then I
would test the sick client for each one of these, and hope they did
not have one for which I didn't have a sample. Even persons with
a simple cold typically had a dozen they tested positive to (not
just Adenovirus).
Next it was time to tune in the frequency generator to a dozen
frequencies for three minutes each. The total process, testing and
treatment, would take about two hours. They frequently got
immediate relief. But often the relief would be temporary. What I
didn't know at that time was that viruses could

infect a larger parasite such as a roundworm. Until you killed
your roundworm and your virus, you would keep getting the virus
back promptly.
In 1993 my son, Geoffrey, joined me and we tried a new approach.
He programmed a computer controlled frequency generator
to automatically cover all the frequencies populated by all
the parasites, viruses, and bacteria, from 290,000 Hz to 470,000
Hz. It spent about three minutes for every 1000 Hz it covered.
This was more efficient, but it meant spending ten hours being
zapped.
Again, the results were disappointing. Arthritis pain, eye
pain, colds were improved, but not completely cured overnight.
Months later I would find that organisms were transmitting as
low as 170,000, and as high as 690,000 Hz. My specimen collection
was obviously incomplete. To cover this larger range,
spending three minutes for every 1000 Hz, would take 26 hours.
Still worth doing if it would indeed help all our illnesses. But
even this method of zapping was not 100% effective for reasons
yet to become clear.
In 1994 my son built a hand held, battery operated, accurate
frequency generator. The purpose was to enable everyone to kill
the intestinal fluke at 434,000 Hz with a low cost device. Enough
benefit would be derived from zapping at various frequencies
that I thought everyone should know how to make one. When I
tested it on one of my own bacteria, however, three others at
much different frequencies died also! This had never happened
before. When I tested it on others, even though they had dozens of
pathogens, all were killed!
Subsequent testing showed it was not due to some unique
design, or special wave form produced by the device. It was due
to battery operation!

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