Guest guest Posted January 17, 2006 Report Share Posted January 17, 2006 Beck said " the blood goes everywhere " . Others echo that from time to time. I have no idea why he said it. It's true but irrelevant to what he did to the blood. Electrifying blood does not make the blood toxic to microbes! It leaves the blood largely unchanged. If there are microbes in the blood WHILE it is being electrified, in the direct PATH of electricity, then, yes these microbes will tend towards inactivation. But the blood itself doesn't change magically into some sort of " electric poison to germs " . It goes on its merry way past the electrodes and is neutral by the time it reaches a microbe in, say the brain. NO effects whatsoever on a microbe living in the brain. You can't just electrify blood and expect things to happen beyond a mild increase in resistance of those blood cells to infection. But not all germs prefer or even need to infect blood cells! Most do not infect blood cells. That's why you haven't heard that much about Beck's blood electrification outside the UFO crowd. It's plain mis- targetted. Any medical person would know this, and when they hear about blood electrification, naturally they are somewhat skeptical, since the blood alone accounts for only a few illnesses. Electricity can fix microbes but good. If it's used on the microbes, not on some fluid that flows around the microbes after that fluid is electrified. Look at it this way: When you turn on a light switch, then turn it off, how long does the light stay on? It's gone instantly. How many rooms does the light illuminate? One room, not the whole house. So it is with the blood electrifier. When you apply the electrodes, the blood under those electrodes gets " lit up " . When you stop, it goes " dark " again. And it's only in the area of the electrodes, between the two of them. dig..? The fact that the blood you just electrified travels around the body means nothing, since it loses the charge as soon as it leaves the electrode area..just like the " light goes out " analogy. There's no residual charge in the blood once the current's switched off or the blood is no longer underneath, in the path of, the electrodes of the device. I hope that will help explain why the electrification of the blood is not the answer to many, if not most, of the ills we are seeing. It's slam-dunk for Malaria, because that lives ONLY in the blood, and is easy to hit by electrification of blood. Most other ills are located in more remote areas and they need special study and attention to apply correctly to those areas, and a strategy to systematically rid the body of them. bG Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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