First published at 21:45 UTC on May 19th, 2018.
To purchase an upgraded 7-electrode Violet Ray Wand Kit for only $170 visit http://www.zpzap.net w/1-year warranty and ongoing telephone support.
Coast-to-Coast AM's Geory Noory interviews Thomas Valone of Integrity Research Institute, autho…
MORE
To purchase an upgraded 7-electrode Violet Ray Wand Kit for only $170 visit http://www.zpzap.net w/1-year warranty and ongoing telephone support.
Coast-to-Coast AM's Geory Noory interviews Thomas Valone of Integrity Research Institute, author of "Zero Point Energy Utilitization" on Nikola Tesla's lost invention, the Violet Ray Wand. http://www.integrityresearchinstitute.org/index.html.
The Violet Ray was originally developed by the famous scientist Nikola Tesla. Tesla was successfully experimenting on disease and rejuvenation with ozone in the late 1800s and early 1900s. In the 20s and 30s, Oxygen-Zone Therapy was used in hospitals, clinics and sanitariums. In the second half of the 20th century, pharmaceutical companies started disparaging all electro-therapies as drug-oriented medicine was taking off.
Tesla had a hunch that, since his high-potential, high-frequency currents could be passed into the body harmlessly, "these currents might lend themselves to electrotherapeutic uses." He experimented upon himself. When Tesla was struck down in the streets by a New York taxi, he didn't deliver himself over to the medicals but dragged himself up to his hotel room where, in seclusion and with the help of his own electrotherapy, he recovered from his fractures and contusions. He never patented in electrotherapy but in 1891 began publishing his observations in technical journals, and seven years later we find Tesla giving a speech to the American Electro-Therapeutic Association in which he details with drawings the high-frequency apparatus he has invented for this purpose, which included a Tesla coil.
When the Violet Ray became popular with the public, doctors and the FDA started to despise them. At first the Journal of the American Medical Association published promising therapeutic results in articles. Then it printed an article about a man who deliberately short-circuited his violet ray and electrocuted himself. This implied that the device was dangerous and sho..
LESS