Showing posts with label healing codes for the biological apocalypse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healing codes for the biological apocalypse. Show all posts

Friday, November 11, 2011

Prepare for the coming food collapse (free)


Prepared for the Food Collapse Crisis in America?

Getting a Biodome that produces food non-stop is easy, cheap, and extremely liberating. Learn exactly how through this FREE live online training...

Sign up for the free online training Webinar to learn:

  • How to quickly and easily build a Biodome, which produces food year round, even in the dead of winter.

  • The 3 actions to start taking right now to start preparing the entire family for food shortages to survive the economic collapse. (This is not about buying gold or silver!)

  • How to thrive rather than just "survive" during times of turmoil

  • How to use Aquaponic to literally have an "automated food supply" that grows food 24/7 with only a few hours of work per week.

  • How to grow food that is 500% to 1,000% more nutrient dense than normal food.

  • The secret to restoring completely dead soil with biodynamics. (This is a MUST for anyone living in a suburban location!)

Seats to the Webinar are free but are on a first come first served basis. So make sure to reserve a seat now and be there early! More

  • Kacper M. Postawski, the Biodome Guy

Friday, October 7, 2011

Consciousness and Connection (video)

Wisdom Quarterly
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Gregg Braden takes us on a short trip through consciousness. It is what connects our feelings and our mass reality. Braden was in Sedona, Arizona spreading the word. The shift is getting closer.

Gregg Braden has searched remote monasteries, high mountain villages, and forgotten texts to uncover their timeless secrets for over 22 years. Combining those discoveries with the best science of today, his original research crosses traditional boundaries in science, history, and religion offering fresh insights into ancient mysteries. He redefines the relationship between inner and outer worlds, sharing a life-affirming message of hope and possibility. According to hm there is a great epoch of peace, cooperation, and healing yet to come!

Monday, June 20, 2011

Curing cancer with (banned) Rife technology

Text by Bibliotecapleyades.net

Healing with light and sound is the medicine of the future (energymedc.com).

The Reasonable Persons Guide to Strange Ideas next examines one of the most astounding claims on the Net.

Overview of Claims

Some claim that Dr. Royal Raymond Rife (1) developed a super microscope, (2) was able to see live viruses, (3) which gave off their own unique light [frequencies], by which he found that (4) all the forms of human cancer he studied were caused by the same viral infection (BX virus), and that (5) these cancer viruses will shatter both on microscope slides and in living animals when exposed to certain frequencies. (6) His 1934 Rife Ray Equipment at the University of Southern California cured 14 helpless cancer cases after three months and eventually 100% of the 16 cures attempted. (7) Rife worked with top people in medicine at his time including doctors at the Mayo Clinic. (8) Rife won scientific awards. (9) Drug companies and electron microscope competition suppressed him and all others who succeeded in duplicating his work.

Was Rife a scam artist? Or did he cure cancer?

The Rife Microscopes
No one doubts that Royal Raymond Rife was a real individual who did indeed create several unique microscopes. Some very fine pictures of his scopes exist today. The one below is the Universal Microscope, one of five scopes purported to have been capable of seeing living viruses.

One microscope expert reading this article wrote that Baush and Lomb offered Rife "a ton of money" in the late 1930s. But B&L ran because the microscope was a fraud. So far my request for documentation of this claim has gone unanswered as has the question: If no Rife scope worked, how does one explain the nice photos of Tetanus spores and Typhoid Bacillus taken by Rife's Universal Microscope published in the 1944 Smithsonian Report?

Goal of This Article
This author hopes to entice readers to think, to learn, and to explore science. This article (still a work in progress) will walk through various Rife claims from the perspective of an open minded independent scientist. The aim is to make this intelligible to anyone with a basic high school or college education. To understand the claims, a few terms must first be defined. More


Thursday, May 12, 2011

The World Will End Tomorrow!



Why failed predictions DON'T stop apocalypse forecasters
LiveScience.com (Bad Science by Benjamin Radford, Jan. 3, 2011)

If a group of fundamentalist Christians is right, you only have nine more months to live.

Harold Camping, leader of the ministry Family Radio Worldwide, has concluded after careful study of the Bible that the world will begin to end on May 21, 2011.

It will actually take several months for the process to be complete, but Camping is certain that by October it will all be over. And his group is doing their best to warn everyone.

The sect is spreading its doomsday message using billboards, travelling caravans of RVs holding volunteers who pass out relevant pamphlets, and bus-stop benches, according to the Associated Press:

"Cities from Bridgeport, Conn., to Little Rock, Ark., now have billboards with the ominous message, and mission groups are traveling through Latin America and Africa to spread the news outside the U.S," the AP reported.

Fundamentalist Christians have a long and colorful history of searching for -- and mistakenly believing they have found -- clues about when Jesus would return to Earth and bring about the final judgment.

In the early 1800s farmer William Miller concluded from a Bible study that the world would end April 23, 1843. It did not. [10 Failed Doomsday Predictions to make you feel better]

One of the great popularizers of Christian end-times is Hal Lindsey, author of the wildly popular best seller The Late Great Planet Earth (Zondervan, 1970). After his prophecies failed to materialize, he wrote a follow-up called Apocalypse Code (Western Front Ltd., 1997). More>>

Buddhist Prophecies?
Wisdom Quarterly (COMMENTARY)
One thing used to puzzle social psychologists about apocalyptic cults that predict a specific date for the "end of the world." What? They do not disband the day after. They get stronger!

The prediction not coming true brings them together. Clever cult leaders can tell their followers that they averted the catastrophe. If it weren't for them, the world would surely have ended. This is a pattern as old as the Vedas.

Near Eastern pre-JudeoChristian religions were influenced by the empire to the east, which was called Bharat (India as an expansive empire). It gave rise to Buddhism, which influenced Christianity a great deal. Predictions the Buddha made were about the distant future. Often they were general, part of repeating cycles of human social decay and renewal.

The question is, What is the good of any prediction?

It seems it keeps people on the ball, on task, on top of their goals to insure that when they are reborn, and they will be, they are happy about how they lived.

Today seems to last forever, and we slack off. But tomorrow, we are overjoyed to have made merit that secured our future. The next buddha will not be coming any time soon. But the message of the historical Buddha still exists on Earth (with increasing distortions and misunderstandings).

Things will get worse. And everyone will die (except the enlightened, who do not "die"). Things will get better. And nearly everyone will be reborn right away (except the enlightened, who have overcome rebirth). Sound like a contradiction?

On the one hand, if an ordinary being passes away, then a name, personality, and opportunity ends.

But the accumulation of karma continues to bear results in a new form. It is not the same form or personality and does not go by the same name. On the other hand, if an enlightened person passes away, rebirth and suffering permanently end right there. So it cannot be called "death," which always rebirth. Overcoming samsara is final nirvana (parinirvana) -- the end of all suffering without remainder.

Given all this, it is easy to see how even ancient Westerners in Greco-Roman empires and all along the Silk Route began to reword these wisdom teachings. The "deathless" (nirvana) became "eternal life." Ultimate bliss became ordinary happiness -- that is, nirvana became nothing but a "heaven."

The end of the "world" came to mean the end of everything. In fact, all that ends in Buddhist, Christian, and Mayan prophecy is an age.

It's the end of an astronomical age. That's why people look at the stars (astronomy) and consult astrological charts, studying the meaning of celestial bodies moving -- looking for precession on small-seasonal and big-axial scales.

There's some tribulation. But there's tribulation even when it's not the end of an age. Whether the world is ending tomorrow or not, it's always good to do good and come into line with one's values.

It in an effort that these things be understood correctly that Wisdom Quarterly tackles Buddhist subjects no one else touches -- and points them out in connection to topics non-Buddhists do tackle: prophecy, karma, history, the heavens (literal worlds in space), "angelic" extraterrestrial involvement in human affairs, and more.