A really fascinating subject I bought a Spooky 2 recently, still haven’t had time to try it out.
Also, I watched a great presentation about how Cathedrals were actually old world healing centres, based on sound waves, organs and bells, which acted with the building harmonics.
That brings you to another rabbit hole about the lack of toilets in these ancient buildings, perhaps the body treated waste differently due to the sound treatments.
Amazing “discoveries” being made all the time, or as you say are they just being made public now. Like Trumps cryptic medbed post. Medbeds being based on sound healing.
Rife (Spooky 2) is modulated EMF, (i.e. radio or light) typically of a fixed frequency.
Completely different mechanism.
That said, rife is a huge scam and full of lies. Anyone who passed high school physics should be able to dismantle it thoroughly.
The spooky 2 adds even more scientific sounding nonsense. You really have to stop thinking in order up buy into the outrageous lies.
/u/TestableHypothesis, its not a different mechanism at all, its precisely the same mechanism, the medium is what has changed. One is sound, one is electromagnetism, both work in precisely the same way. Frequency based, not medium based.
Have a look at Professor Hameroff from Arizona, he is one of the world leaders in consciousness studies and speaks of frequency's to treat cognitive and mental dysfunction.
https://hameroff.arizona.edu/
I know a Navy man who did harmonics for the military. The use of sound. They were perfecting it for torture. This is where you realize they know the good in it as well but never told us.
The use of sound for torture we saw at Waco, when they used rock music to drive the people out. They used the Barney song at Abu Graib against the Taliban after 9/11 to get them to speak.
Knowing repetitive tones can drive people crazy, they know the repetitive tones that are pleasing. That is how they are creating all of our musical bands today, instead of scouting them for their originality. Especially all the young ones, Pop-Tarts.
John Kanzius, a former broadcast engineer (with a background in radio and TV engineering) from Erie, Pennsylvania, who developed an experimental cancer treatment in the mid-2000s. Diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 2003, Kanzius began tinkering in his basement workshop and created a prototype device that used radiofrequency (RF) waves—essentially a form of non-ionizing electromagnetic energy, often described in media as a "radiofrequency light" or "wave therapy"—combined with gold or carbon nanoparticles to target and heat cancer cells selectively, destroying them without harming surrounding healthy tissue.
The therapy, called Kanzius RF Therapy, showed early promise in lab and animal tests for treating various cancers, with researchers noting it could potentially eliminate tumors noninvasively, without chemotherapy's side effects or the need for surgery. Initial testing and research collaboration happened at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) starting in 2005, including in vitro studies on human cancer cells and in vivo animal models. For instance, a 2007 study published in the Journal of Surgical Research demonstrated effective cell death in targeted tissues, and further work at UPMC and MD Anderson Cancer Center explored enhancements like carbon nanotubes for better precision.
Kanzius founded a company called Therm Med to advance the tech, but he passed away in 2009 from complications related to pneumonia and leukemia before it reached human clinical trials or FDA approval. While the treatment generated significant buzz (including a famous 2008 60 Minutes segment), it hasn't been commercialized, though some related nanoparticle-RF concepts continue in oncology research today.
Think maybe the idea got black shelved when Kanzius died?
Rife is modulated EMF, (i.e. radio or light) typically of a fixed frequency.
Completely different mechanism.
That said, rife is a huge scam and full of lies. Anyone who passed high school physics should be able to dismantle it thoroughly.
The New Agers have been talking about something similar utilizing tuning forks. They push one particular frequency but I don't recall exactly what it is -- I'd have to look it up.
I don't know if it works. The claim is that sound frequencies improve health. They started talking about this about five or six years ago I think -- It's a lot more primative than elaborate ultrasound equipment, but they do it daily as a kind of health maintenence thing. So perhaps they brushed up against a low level of what these people in the article you've posted discovered.
I'd like to mention something similar but different called ESWT extracorporeal (outside of the body) shock wave therapy. It's basically a kind of fast jackhammer used on the skin that creates shock waves and low frequency sound inside the body.
I have a FDA approved medical device that is an ESWT device and its cured me of heel spurs and plantar fasciitis that is related to the heel spurs (from compensation). Cured. As in the heel spurs are gone. And the plantar fasciitis is gone. Also, ulnar fasciitis / tendinits : gone. Sore neck: gone. Tendinitis: treated and disappears rapidly. Nerve damage causing charlie horses in feet: treated.
This is what I have, and though its 700 dollars, that's a lot cheaper than 1200 per treatment for shockwave therapy PER VISIT (they said 3 visit 'ought to do it'). I own the device, and so every time I use it, I basically save 1200 dollars
Doesn't look like it should be 700 dollars does it? Its worth every penny.
An AI slop familiar with the matter, had this to say:
Extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT) is distinct from ultrasound therapy in its mechanism of action, physical properties, and clinical applications. ESWT uses high-energy, low-frequency acoustic waves characterized by a single, high-peak-pressure pulse followed by a low tensile amplitude, creating both positive and negative phases that induce mechanical stress and cavitation in tissues. This results in direct mechanical forces and secondary shockwave effects from imploding gas bubbles, which stimulate tissue repair, neovascularization, and collagen synthesis. In contrast, ultrasound therapy employs high-frequency sound waves that generate thermal and non-thermal effects, primarily through gentle heating of tissues to increase blood flow and reduce inflammation.
The peak pressure of shockwaves is approximately 1000 times greater than that of ultrasound waves, leading to significantly different biological impacts. While both therapies are non-invasive and use a coupling medium to transmit energy to tissues, ESWT does not produce heating effects, unlike ultrasound. ESWT is primarily used for chronic musculoskeletal conditions such as plantar fasciopathy, tendinopathies, and non-union fractures, particularly when conservative treatments have failed. Ultrasound therapy is commonly applied in both acute and chronic conditions, including soft tissue injuries, strains, sprains, and inflammation.
I don't think it holds promise, I think it's a known cure and has been around for who knows how long.
Rife technology, Tesla maybe too, and numerous others I'm sure. But here's a video I came across a few years ago, this one was posted three years ago but I'm fairly certain it's older.
You think because you post something with some "new" technology you're some progressive member here?
I was only pointing out it's nothing new, there is nothing new under the sun. I could have used better wording in saying "I don't think it holds promise", but I wasn't saying that literally, I was countering the title of the article.
I just down voted myself since you felt the need to double post this comment, I'll bring mine to a -2
Thank you for taking the time and effort for pointing out these things!
Edit: Maybe you didn't double post this but it showed as two posts in my Inbox. Oh well, I'll leave my seemingly deserved down vote alone.
Really though, I wasn't trying to poo poo on your post but your response was a little over the top, name calling, belittling and saying how to think and post.
Apologies it came off wrong, but did I miss the gist of the article from the title that it's a variation of frequency healing? That was my take, and no I didn't read it's entirety. After several years of reading articles about new this or that which have yet, or may never, come to be, I don't read entire articles anymore.
Take it as you will, but my posts aren't meant with negative intention. I don't like spreading negativity and try my best not to. If I feel that behind a thought, I don't post.
Cool name btw, it's meaning has intrigued me for some time, I looked it up this morning and would seem to be the Fourth Horseman in Greek according to Brave AI
Or just eat high fat natural meat! Brains are made of fatty acids and protein. All cells need cholesterol! So if we take human cholesterol away - body must make more. Hormones are made of cholesterol! Take the fat away you have infertility, low testosterone levels, and belly issues for women and girls. Thyroid issues ..you name it. Go to Dr Shawn Baker and Dr Ken Berry for more information. Oh and low fat = gall bladder disease! Yup lack of proper human dietary fats aka eggs meat dairy seafood. No seed oils. Fruit oils - avocado and olive are fine if they are clean, many have had seed oils added to them. Stick to lard, bacon grease butter.
A really fascinating subject I bought a Spooky 2 recently, still haven’t had time to try it out.
Also, I watched a great presentation about how Cathedrals were actually old world healing centres, based on sound waves, organs and bells, which acted with the building harmonics.
That brings you to another rabbit hole about the lack of toilets in these ancient buildings, perhaps the body treated waste differently due to the sound treatments.
Amazing “discoveries” being made all the time, or as you say are they just being made public now. Like Trumps cryptic medbed post. Medbeds being based on sound healing.
Great post.
Rife (Spooky 2) is modulated EMF, (i.e. radio or light) typically of a fixed frequency.
Completely different mechanism.
That said, rife is a huge scam and full of lies. Anyone who passed high school physics should be able to dismantle it thoroughly.
The spooky 2 adds even more scientific sounding nonsense. You really have to stop thinking in order up buy into the outrageous lies.
Thanks, your handle reminds of others we often see here, like unquestionable truth, killer space robots etc.
Do you guys have a username generator or something?
My mother used to say “if you don’t have anything constructive to say, fuck off” or words to that effect. You should take her advice.
/u/TestableHypothesis, its not a different mechanism at all, its precisely the same mechanism, the medium is what has changed. One is sound, one is electromagnetism, both work in precisely the same way. Frequency based, not medium based.
Thank you for your valuable contribution. How’s the job hunting going, or are you just killing time waiting for the shutdown to end?
Now that you have so much free time, why not look into the Golden Section.
By the way, that’s the most Fed like handle I’ve seen yet, well done.
A user name like Redneck trucker would be the best best obvious fed handle.
Tesla knew everything was frequency. Our dimensions are separated by operating on different frequencies
Thanks bro
Have a look at Professor Hameroff from Arizona, he is one of the world leaders in consciousness studies and speaks of frequency's to treat cognitive and mental dysfunction. https://hameroff.arizona.edu/
I know a Navy man who did harmonics for the military. The use of sound. They were perfecting it for torture. This is where you realize they know the good in it as well but never told us.
The use of sound for torture we saw at Waco, when they used rock music to drive the people out. They used the Barney song at Abu Graib against the Taliban after 9/11 to get them to speak. Knowing repetitive tones can drive people crazy, they know the repetitive tones that are pleasing. That is how they are creating all of our musical bands today, instead of scouting them for their originality. Especially all the young ones, Pop-Tarts.
Future torture methods will use Kamala speeches.
No no no, anything but.
I didn't tell the story of what happened at Waco above. I said they brought the technology there for a few days and tried that tech.
John Kanzius, a former broadcast engineer (with a background in radio and TV engineering) from Erie, Pennsylvania, who developed an experimental cancer treatment in the mid-2000s. Diagnosed with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 2003, Kanzius began tinkering in his basement workshop and created a prototype device that used radiofrequency (RF) waves—essentially a form of non-ionizing electromagnetic energy, often described in media as a "radiofrequency light" or "wave therapy"—combined with gold or carbon nanoparticles to target and heat cancer cells selectively, destroying them without harming surrounding healthy tissue.
The therapy, called Kanzius RF Therapy, showed early promise in lab and animal tests for treating various cancers, with researchers noting it could potentially eliminate tumors noninvasively, without chemotherapy's side effects or the need for surgery. Initial testing and research collaboration happened at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) starting in 2005, including in vitro studies on human cancer cells and in vivo animal models. For instance, a 2007 study published in the Journal of Surgical Research demonstrated effective cell death in targeted tissues, and further work at UPMC and MD Anderson Cancer Center explored enhancements like carbon nanotubes for better precision.
Kanzius founded a company called Therm Med to advance the tech, but he passed away in 2009 from complications related to pneumonia and leukemia before it reached human clinical trials or FDA approval. While the treatment generated significant buzz (including a famous 2008 60 Minutes segment), it hasn't been commercialized, though some related nanoparticle-RF concepts continue in oncology research today.
Think maybe the idea got black shelved when Kanzius died?
Another one to explore for this thread is sound or light at 40Hz. Read about what it can do, genuinely fascinating.
Examples
https://news.mit.edu/2025/evidence-40hz-gamma-stimulation-promotes-brain-health-expanding-0314
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-78528-7
https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03657745
https://picower.mit.edu/news/40-hz-vibrations-reduce-alzheimers-pathology-symptoms-mouse-models
its not only good for alzheimers and dementia, strokes etc. Dive in, really interesting area to explore for anyone interested
This thread would like to learn about 1/2Hz sensory resonances.
Sounds like Rife technology.
http://www.royal-rife.com/
Rife is modulated EMF, (i.e. radio or light) typically of a fixed frequency.
Completely different mechanism.
That said, rife is a huge scam and full of lies. Anyone who passed high school physics should be able to dismantle it thoroughly.
Thanks. That’s why they banned it, took all his research and basically put him out of business, ruined his life. Because it didn’t work.
How much savings do you have left? Did you start looking for a real job? or are you hoping Trump won’t fire you, because you’re special and clever.
The New Agers have been talking about something similar utilizing tuning forks. They push one particular frequency but I don't recall exactly what it is -- I'd have to look it up.
I don't know if it works. The claim is that sound frequencies improve health. They started talking about this about five or six years ago I think -- It's a lot more primative than elaborate ultrasound equipment, but they do it daily as a kind of health maintenence thing. So perhaps they brushed up against a low level of what these people in the article you've posted discovered.
I prefer Fenbendazole.
Illness is just our bodies out of tune
I'd like to mention something similar but different called ESWT extracorporeal (outside of the body) shock wave therapy. It's basically a kind of fast jackhammer used on the skin that creates shock waves and low frequency sound inside the body.
I have a FDA approved medical device that is an ESWT device and its cured me of heel spurs and plantar fasciitis that is related to the heel spurs (from compensation). Cured. As in the heel spurs are gone. And the plantar fasciitis is gone. Also, ulnar fasciitis / tendinits : gone. Sore neck: gone. Tendinitis: treated and disappears rapidly. Nerve damage causing charlie horses in feet: treated.
This is what I have, and though its 700 dollars, that's a lot cheaper than 1200 per treatment for shockwave therapy PER VISIT (they said 3 visit 'ought to do it'). I own the device, and so every time I use it, I basically save 1200 dollars
Doesn't look like it should be 700 dollars does it? Its worth every penny.
An AI slop familiar with the matter, had this to say:
I don't think it holds promise, I think it's a known cure and has been around for who knows how long.
Rife technology, Tesla maybe too, and numerous others I'm sure. But here's a video I came across a few years ago, this one was posted three years ago but I'm fairly certain it's older.
https://www.bitchute.com/video/bzhPJmeqLUJ9/
Edit: I didn't mean to say it doesn't hold promise per say, my thought at the time of posting this earlier was countering the article title.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pWdd6_ZxX8c
How is that shilling?
You think because you post something with some "new" technology you're some progressive member here?
I was only pointing out it's nothing new, there is nothing new under the sun. I could have used better wording in saying "I don't think it holds promise", but I wasn't saying that literally, I was countering the title of the article.
I just down voted myself since you felt the need to double post this comment, I'll bring mine to a -2
Thank you for taking the time and effort for pointing out these things!
Edit: Maybe you didn't double post this but it showed as two posts in my Inbox. Oh well, I'll leave my seemingly deserved down vote alone.
blah blah blah, but good luck.
Got it, you too brother, enjoy the weekend!
Really though, I wasn't trying to poo poo on your post but your response was a little over the top, name calling, belittling and saying how to think and post.
Apologies it came off wrong, but did I miss the gist of the article from the title that it's a variation of frequency healing? That was my take, and no I didn't read it's entirety. After several years of reading articles about new this or that which have yet, or may never, come to be, I don't read entire articles anymore.
Take it as you will, but my posts aren't meant with negative intention. I don't like spreading negativity and try my best not to. If I feel that behind a thought, I don't post.
Cool name btw, it's meaning has intrigued me for some time, I looked it up this morning and would seem to be the Fourth Horseman in Greek according to Brave AI
Rife is modulated EMF, (i.e. radio or light) typically of a fixed frequency.
Completely different mechanism.
Rife is a complete scam.
Again, thanks for your valuable input.
Those are some thought provoking comments.
Or just eat high fat natural meat! Brains are made of fatty acids and protein. All cells need cholesterol! So if we take human cholesterol away - body must make more. Hormones are made of cholesterol! Take the fat away you have infertility, low testosterone levels, and belly issues for women and girls. Thyroid issues ..you name it. Go to Dr Shawn Baker and Dr Ken Berry for more information. Oh and low fat = gall bladder disease! Yup lack of proper human dietary fats aka eggs meat dairy seafood. No seed oils. Fruit oils - avocado and olive are fine if they are clean, many have had seed oils added to them. Stick to lard, bacon grease butter.