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This site is dedicated to Professor Antoine Bechamp (1816--1908) and those whose work, consciously or otherwise, is building on what he started. For those unfamiliar with the notion of pleomorphism, some of the reading on the articles page will be a good place to start.
    Any additions to this site -- links, pictures, articles -- are always welcome.


New in the articles section

  • Are Nanobacteria Making Us Ill?

    By Amit Asaravala

  • Doctors kill more people than

    guns and traffic accidents
    by Don Harkins, The Idaho Observer.

  • Mad Cow Disease: What the Government Isn't Telling You

    by Lorraine Day

  • Clouds May Harbor

    'Nanobacteria'
    By Amit Asaravala


Royal Rife: an introduction
by Jeff Rense

"One day, the name of Royal Raymond Rife may ascend to its rightful place as the giant of modern medical science. Until that time, his fabulous technology remains available only to the people who have the interest to seek it out. While perfectly legal for veterinarians to use to save the lives of animals, Rife's brilliant frequency therapy remains taboo to orthodox mainstream medicine because of the continuing threat it poses to the international pharmaceutical medical monopoly that controls the lives - and deaths - of the vast majority of the people on this planet." More...


 

 


NEW (Jan 2007)

Béchamp or Pasteur?
A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology
by Ethel Douglas Hume

prefaced by

Pasteur: Plagiarist, Impostor
The Germ Theory Exploded
by R.B. Pearson

Hardcover (cloth w/ dustjacket): 352 pages
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0980297605
ISBN-13: 978-0980297607
Price: $US24.99 or UK12.99

Published by bechamp.org, 2007

Available from Amazon USA or Amazon UK

Book sample in PDF format:
pages 1-30 and 96-126. Download

More information (incl. contents)


 

Are these Bechamp's Microzymas?
The University of Queensland's Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis has been researching and photographing what they call 'nanobes'.
Dr Philippa Uwins' research paper, published in American Minerologist, is here in pdf format. This description of 'nanobes' is from their web site:

"Nanobes have cellular structures similar to Actinomycetes and fungi (spores, hyphae and fruiting bodies) with the exception that they are up to 10 times smaller in diameter (25nm-1.0m). They have hollow, membrane bound structures that are most likely composed of C, O and N. Whilst morphologically distinct, nanobes are in the same size range as the controversial nanobacteria described by others in a variety of different rock types and in the Martian meteorite ALH84001. Current and future research will focus on the establishment of axenic cultures for analysis of growth rates and for determining the nature of their genetic material."

See the articles page for more on nanobes.


 

 



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