Electronic Medicine
In this video, Alan Stang spends about 25 minutes speaking on "Electronic Medicine" at the 35th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
Transcription
As I saw people walking in, ladies and gentlemen, I did hear from someone whom I couldn't identify an allusion to my height. Let me remind you that about 40 years ago when I first met Frank, cause cause I know I was six foot three inches tall. This morning, I bring you news of a remarkable technology. A revolutionary technology that, as I speak, is rapidly changing how and what we think about health. At the center of that change, of course, is a growing understanding and application of electronic frequencies.
The subatomic particle physicist, you may know, tell us that there is no such thing as solid objects. There is no such thing as solid matter. They tell us the only reason we think we see solid objects is that our eyesight is not good enough to see what is really there. If we could see what is really there, if our eyesight were good enough when we looked at each other, we would see rotating vibrating nodes of light. If I could put it that way, which are arranged in a specific pattern, and that pattern of of vibrating electronic nodes, of light frequencies, electronic frequencies would be you would be you and and would be all all the rest of us. That's what we would see according to the atomic subatomic particle physicist, if we could see what what was really there. But since we can't, we think we see solid objects. If those frequencies become unbalanced, the frequencies that compose everything in the universe, if those frequencies in your body become unbalanced, you will get sick. So the question obviously arises, how do you restore balance? How do you restore the balance in those frequencies? Going back about twenty five hundred years ago, Hippocrates, he's the Greek physician, was the first known physician to enunciate the the medical principle, the restorative principle that like cures like a when a symptom arose in a patient of Hippocrates. Jesus, he theorized that the symptom was not the disease that he was treating. It was the body's attempt to get rid of the disease. That principle, again, was first enunciated by hypocrisies. It fell somewhat into disuse during the Roman Empire that succeeded the Greeks. When Galen was the principle, the most famous doctor in the world, I guess at that time, Galen believed the opposite. Galen and his followers generally believed that the the symptom was the disease. And so the principle fell somewhat into disuse. It was restored in the late renaissance by another doctor in Europe named who took the name Paracelsus. Paracelsus was an absolutely Royalle drunk. And that's why when he wrote, he