The Fishbein Impact On The American Health System
By James Donahue
Most Americans agree that the nation’s health system has degenerated into a high-cost composite of radical surgeries, extensive torture treatments and a quagmire of prescription medications that have been big business for the medical providers.
The system is obviously broken. Without health insurance to help cover the cost of medical treatment, people are no longer going to the doctor unless it is an extreme emergency. Elderly folks on fixed incomes are choosing between important medications or food. The cost of health care in America is beyond the means of most Americans. And the high cost of providing health insurance for workers is a major factor in causing many employers to shut their doors or move their businesses overseas.
When President Barack Obama introduced a national health insurance program for all Americans, he appeared to be zeroing in on resolving a critical need. But he also was forced to butt heads with powerful lobby groups representing the American Medical Association and big pharmaceutical companies who used all of their tricks to stop him.
With the help of a gang of sold-out members of the two houses, we watched a well-orchestrated advertising campaign designed to turn the nation against the Obama health plan.
They spent big bucks on the campaign because there are billions to be lost if health care became nationalized. We can only imagine the “wheeling and dealing” that went on in the back rooms just to get the cock-eyed insurance program we now have introduced, approved and eventually signed into law.
In the end, it wasn’t what the people wanted. I would like to believe it wasn’t what Mr. Obama wanted. But at least it was a federal health plan, it was on the books, and if the people are selective in the representatives they send to Washington in 2016 there is a possibility of amending the health plan to simplify all of the paperwork, the mass confusion, and make it a program to benefit everybody.
What we learned from that battle was that the mega-banking system in America hasn’t been the only place where corruption has been breeding in dark shadows. There has been a lot of money underhandedly skimmed from the pockets of the people by the medical industry as well.
The Oncology industry in American hospitals is a primary example of the problem we have been facing. For those who don’t know the word, oncology is the study and treatment of malignant tumors, or cancer in the human body. Entire hospital wards specialize in this field which utilizes a combination of treatments ranging from highly abrasive surgery to weeks of torture under chemotherapy and heavy doses of costly and poisonous medication.
People who go through the cancer treatment program and their families often end up in bankruptcy court even if they have insurance because the coverage only pays a portion of the hundreds of thousands of dollars in costs. In the end, the odds are often stacked against the patient. All of the money spent and personal suffering usually only prolongs the patient's life for a few years at best.
President Obama, who recently lost his grandmother to cancer, says he wants to finance medical research to find a real cure. What Mr. Obama and millions of Americans have been prevented from knowing is that a cure for this disease appears to have been known since 1934 and has been kept under wraps, by court order, ever since.
There is an amazing story behind the discovery. It involved a genius named Royal Rife (1888-1971) who invented the first microscope powerful enough to see and identify bacteria and viruses, used it to identify two types of virus that he said caused cancer, and then invented a sound frequency machine that destroyed them.
By as early as 1920 Rife identified a virus that he believed caused cancer. He then began subjecting this virus to different radio frequencies to see if it was affected by them. He discovered that everything in nature vibrates at different frequencies. If the resonance is correct, he found it can be used to shatter specific cells, bacteria and viruses without harming the surrounding healthy cells. He successfully cured cancer in about 400 experimental animals before testing his discovery on humans.
Rife claimed the device not only stopped cancer, it also destroyed herpes, polio, spinal meningitis, tuberculosis, tetanus, influenza and over 50 other dangerous disease-causing organisms. He literally invented a machine that would cure the ills of everyone. All it took was someone trained to find and identify the virus or bacteria, set the correct resonance, and zap it.
The machine was said to even work on worms and tiny insects that invaded the human body.
The problem was that Rife had invented a machine that threatened to destroy the nation’s multi-million dollar medical industry, which in 1934 was already growing into a powerful and politically influential political organization.
This is when Dr. Morris Fishbein (1889-1976), the head of the American Medical Association and editor of the association’s journal (JAMA) got involved.
Fishbein, who had squeaked his way through medical school and never treated a patient in his life, used his position as head of the AMA and editor of JAMA to gain personal wealth, control the drug manufacturing industry and crush legitimate new therapies out of existence. He used his position to decide which drugs could be sold to the public and this is believed to have been determined by the amount of advertising money he could extort from the pharmaceutical makers. It did not seem to be relevant if the drugs even worked.
The AMA was founded as a guild in 1847 to give practicing physicians a place to gather, exchange trade knowledge and socialize. By 1900, however, a group of doctors introduced the idea of using the AMA as a closed corporation for their financial benefit. A constitution, bylaws and charter were created that gave three directors control of the organization’s activities. One of the directors resigned in 1924 and Fishbein was appointed to succeed him. By 1934, Fishbein owned all of the stock and had total control of the AMA.
In a nutshell, the AMA exists today to assist in the treatment of disease, but not to cure it.
Rife’s machine was receiving a lot of publicity after it successfully cured cancer in terminal patients who volunteered for the treatment. One day Rife was visited by a lawyer, representing Fishbein, who offered to buy out Rife’s patent. Rife said no.
Fishbein then conspired with an investor in Beam Ray, a company that helped build the machines, to legally steal the company. The case went to court and a trial in 1939 put an end to the scientific research of Rife’s frequency machine. Under the press of legal bills and the savage public attacks, Rife crumbled . . . at least for a while.
In 1950 Rife and John Crane, an electrical engineer, began building new and more advanced frequency machines. But by 1960 they were out of business.
Their labs and the labs of other scientists who had heard of Rife’s work and were attempting to duplicate his machine were burglarized and burned. Dr. Milbank Johnson, former president of the Southern California AMA and who supported Rife, was fatally poisoned and his papers lost.
Rife died in 1971 from an “accidental” lethal dose of Valium and alcohol while he was a patient at Grossmont Hospital.
The Rife machine was such a threat to the established big world of high-priced medicine that the men who worked on it and attempted to perfect it were either bribed or murdered. Because of the fires and burglaries, almost all records were mysteriously stolen or destroyed. But not all.
Sometime in recent years an original Rife resonator machine was found intact. It was secretly studied, modified and information about how to build it began circulating on the World Wide Web.
Today Rife machines are being offered for sale on the web although no one can say if they are the real thing. We hear through informed sources, however, that research is currently underway at a major medical instrument company to develop an even better Rife sound resonator machine. If the AMA doesn’t block it, the machine may soon be available to doctors everywhere. It is possible that a cure for cancer and a lot of other killing and crippling diseases will be readily available to everybody. But don't hold your breath.
We could have had this kind of health system available at least a half century ago had it not been for a greedy man named Fishbein and the big medical and pharmaceutical corporations he represented.
By James Donahue
Most Americans agree that the nation’s health system has degenerated into a high-cost composite of radical surgeries, extensive torture treatments and a quagmire of prescription medications that have been big business for the medical providers.
The system is obviously broken. Without health insurance to help cover the cost of medical treatment, people are no longer going to the doctor unless it is an extreme emergency. Elderly folks on fixed incomes are choosing between important medications or food. The cost of health care in America is beyond the means of most Americans. And the high cost of providing health insurance for workers is a major factor in causing many employers to shut their doors or move their businesses overseas.
When President Barack Obama introduced a national health insurance program for all Americans, he appeared to be zeroing in on resolving a critical need. But he also was forced to butt heads with powerful lobby groups representing the American Medical Association and big pharmaceutical companies who used all of their tricks to stop him.
With the help of a gang of sold-out members of the two houses, we watched a well-orchestrated advertising campaign designed to turn the nation against the Obama health plan.
They spent big bucks on the campaign because there are billions to be lost if health care became nationalized. We can only imagine the “wheeling and dealing” that went on in the back rooms just to get the cock-eyed insurance program we now have introduced, approved and eventually signed into law.
In the end, it wasn’t what the people wanted. I would like to believe it wasn’t what Mr. Obama wanted. But at least it was a federal health plan, it was on the books, and if the people are selective in the representatives they send to Washington in 2016 there is a possibility of amending the health plan to simplify all of the paperwork, the mass confusion, and make it a program to benefit everybody.
What we learned from that battle was that the mega-banking system in America hasn’t been the only place where corruption has been breeding in dark shadows. There has been a lot of money underhandedly skimmed from the pockets of the people by the medical industry as well.
The Oncology industry in American hospitals is a primary example of the problem we have been facing. For those who don’t know the word, oncology is the study and treatment of malignant tumors, or cancer in the human body. Entire hospital wards specialize in this field which utilizes a combination of treatments ranging from highly abrasive surgery to weeks of torture under chemotherapy and heavy doses of costly and poisonous medication.
People who go through the cancer treatment program and their families often end up in bankruptcy court even if they have insurance because the coverage only pays a portion of the hundreds of thousands of dollars in costs. In the end, the odds are often stacked against the patient. All of the money spent and personal suffering usually only prolongs the patient's life for a few years at best.
President Obama, who recently lost his grandmother to cancer, says he wants to finance medical research to find a real cure. What Mr. Obama and millions of Americans have been prevented from knowing is that a cure for this disease appears to have been known since 1934 and has been kept under wraps, by court order, ever since.
There is an amazing story behind the discovery. It involved a genius named Royal Rife (1888-1971) who invented the first microscope powerful enough to see and identify bacteria and viruses, used it to identify two types of virus that he said caused cancer, and then invented a sound frequency machine that destroyed them.
By as early as 1920 Rife identified a virus that he believed caused cancer. He then began subjecting this virus to different radio frequencies to see if it was affected by them. He discovered that everything in nature vibrates at different frequencies. If the resonance is correct, he found it can be used to shatter specific cells, bacteria and viruses without harming the surrounding healthy cells. He successfully cured cancer in about 400 experimental animals before testing his discovery on humans.
Rife claimed the device not only stopped cancer, it also destroyed herpes, polio, spinal meningitis, tuberculosis, tetanus, influenza and over 50 other dangerous disease-causing organisms. He literally invented a machine that would cure the ills of everyone. All it took was someone trained to find and identify the virus or bacteria, set the correct resonance, and zap it.
The machine was said to even work on worms and tiny insects that invaded the human body.
The problem was that Rife had invented a machine that threatened to destroy the nation’s multi-million dollar medical industry, which in 1934 was already growing into a powerful and politically influential political organization.
This is when Dr. Morris Fishbein (1889-1976), the head of the American Medical Association and editor of the association’s journal (JAMA) got involved.
Fishbein, who had squeaked his way through medical school and never treated a patient in his life, used his position as head of the AMA and editor of JAMA to gain personal wealth, control the drug manufacturing industry and crush legitimate new therapies out of existence. He used his position to decide which drugs could be sold to the public and this is believed to have been determined by the amount of advertising money he could extort from the pharmaceutical makers. It did not seem to be relevant if the drugs even worked.
The AMA was founded as a guild in 1847 to give practicing physicians a place to gather, exchange trade knowledge and socialize. By 1900, however, a group of doctors introduced the idea of using the AMA as a closed corporation for their financial benefit. A constitution, bylaws and charter were created that gave three directors control of the organization’s activities. One of the directors resigned in 1924 and Fishbein was appointed to succeed him. By 1934, Fishbein owned all of the stock and had total control of the AMA.
In a nutshell, the AMA exists today to assist in the treatment of disease, but not to cure it.
Rife’s machine was receiving a lot of publicity after it successfully cured cancer in terminal patients who volunteered for the treatment. One day Rife was visited by a lawyer, representing Fishbein, who offered to buy out Rife’s patent. Rife said no.
Fishbein then conspired with an investor in Beam Ray, a company that helped build the machines, to legally steal the company. The case went to court and a trial in 1939 put an end to the scientific research of Rife’s frequency machine. Under the press of legal bills and the savage public attacks, Rife crumbled . . . at least for a while.
In 1950 Rife and John Crane, an electrical engineer, began building new and more advanced frequency machines. But by 1960 they were out of business.
Their labs and the labs of other scientists who had heard of Rife’s work and were attempting to duplicate his machine were burglarized and burned. Dr. Milbank Johnson, former president of the Southern California AMA and who supported Rife, was fatally poisoned and his papers lost.
Rife died in 1971 from an “accidental” lethal dose of Valium and alcohol while he was a patient at Grossmont Hospital.
The Rife machine was such a threat to the established big world of high-priced medicine that the men who worked on it and attempted to perfect it were either bribed or murdered. Because of the fires and burglaries, almost all records were mysteriously stolen or destroyed. But not all.
Sometime in recent years an original Rife resonator machine was found intact. It was secretly studied, modified and information about how to build it began circulating on the World Wide Web.
Today Rife machines are being offered for sale on the web although no one can say if they are the real thing. We hear through informed sources, however, that research is currently underway at a major medical instrument company to develop an even better Rife sound resonator machine. If the AMA doesn’t block it, the machine may soon be available to doctors everywhere. It is possible that a cure for cancer and a lot of other killing and crippling diseases will be readily available to everybody. But don't hold your breath.
We could have had this kind of health system available at least a half century ago had it not been for a greedy man named Fishbein and the big medical and pharmaceutical corporations he represented.