An intelligent person soon realizes there are strong forces we are often unaware of that move within our lives. With all the scientific advances, technological innovations, nutritional information, and the rise in public sanitation over the last 100 years, diseases should be close to extinction by now.
And yet, there are more diseases affecting more people. Even general health and life expectancy are now in decline. The answer to this mystery may simply be how people think about disease. The Industrial Revolution in Europe held the promise of unlimited productivity, more leisure time, and a better life for future generations. But Arthur Firstenburg, in his courageous book, The Invisible Rainbow, traces the history of electricity from the 18th century to the present, making a compelling case that many environmental problems and the major diseases of modern civilization: heart disease, diabetes, and cancer are related to electrical pollution.
The Body Electric: A Turning Point in History
In the 18th century, Luigi Galvani discovered that simply touching a brass hook to an iron wire caused a frog’s leg to contract. The function of the nerves, he reasoned, was to discharge the stored electricity in the muscles. The dissimilar metals, in direct contact with the muscles, mimicked the natural function of the animal’s own nerves. Galvani’s countryman, Alessandro Volta, held an opposing and, at the time, heretical opinion. The electric current, he claimed, came from the two dissimilar metals themselves. Volta argued that the frog’s leg convulsion was due entirely to the external stimulus. Volta went on to invent, what today is, the direct current automobile battery—two different metals immersed in acid connected by a wire. Convention soon accepted what seemed an obvious meme—that electricity was external to the human body. And this obscure 18th-century decision by humankind changed history.
For, as Firstenburg says, “Volta pronounced that electricity and life are distinct and that there are no electric currents flowing in the body. To this day, in the teaching of biology, chemistry is king, and electricity is omitted.” But what if Galvani had a point- that there is a complex system within the body where every function is the result of an electric impulse? What if the huge inundation of electrical emanations from modern appliances, transmission lines, and 5G towers is actually a daily invisible assault on the delicate, dynamic mechanism within the human body? Could this enormous electrical onslaught be a major, undetected cause of disease?
Think Like An Electrician
In the splendid book “Healing is Voltage,” Dr. Jerry Tennant explains that the human body must constantly make new cells to function, heal, and survive. “Chronic disease occurs when we lose the ability to make new cells that work.” Making new cells requires 50 millivolts of energy. Almost all chronic diseases are characterized by low voltage. Just as a new Mercedes without a battery isn’t going anywhere, a body without a functional electrical system doesn’t work either. Therefore, the title of the book is “Healing is Voltage,” and “Our muscles are voltage generators as well as rechargeable batteries. Without exercise, our battery system goes dead.” It all starts when you begin thinking like an electrician instead of a physician. Check the voltage of the system of the body (the acupuncture system), and you will be on your way to finding the problem and its solution. Dr. Tennant, an eye surgeon, healed himself of a 7-year affliction of meningitis with electromagnetic therapy.
The Invisible Rainbow
Firstenburg endorses this insight, claiming that the discovery of electricity and viewing it as independent of the human body, as Volta did, resulted in an electrical onslaught of mammoth proportions on the delicate circuitry of humans. “We live today with a number of devastating diseases that do not belong here, whose origin we do not know, whose presence we take for granted and no longer question. What it feels like to be without them, we have completely forgotten.” Anxiety disorder, afflicting 1/6 of humanity, did not exist before the 1860s, when telegraph wires first encircled the earth. No hint of it appears in medical literature before 1866. In its present form, influenza was invented in 1889 along with Alternating Current (AC). Many of the doctors flooded with the disease in 1889 had never seen a case before. Prior to the 1860s (the Civil War in America), diabetes was so rare that few doctors saw more than 1 or 2 cases in their lifetime. Heart disease at the time was the 25th most common cause of death, behind accidental drowning. It was extraordinary to have a diseased heart. Cancer was also exceedingly rare. Even tobacco smoking in non-electrified times did not cause lung cancer.
These are the diseases of civilization, diseases we live with because of a refusal to recognize the force that we have harnessed for what it is. The 60-cycle current in our house wiring, the ultrasonic frequencies in our computers, the radio waves in our televisions, and the neuro waves in our cell phones are only distortions of the invisible rainbow that runs through our veins and makes us alive.
The Lethal London Fog
Wood powered the first steam engines and power plants of Europe’s Industrial Revolution. But, very soon, the available forests were depleted, and industrialists turned to coal as the favored fuel of the insatiable external combustion engine. By 1870, London’s nickname was The Big Smoke, describing the sulfur dioxide and the NO2 haze settling over the city from coal-burning smokestacks. The putrid gloom was the backdrop of many Victorian novels, such as Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Bleak House, and Sherlock Holmes thrillers. London’s pea soupers continued well into the 20th century, emissions growing in direct proportion to population increase. In 1840, London, the world’s most populous city, was home to 2 million people. By 1952, it had grown to 10 million residents. In that year, because of a thermal inversion, a killer fog caused 10,000 deaths, with over 150,000 hospitalized. The coal-burning power plants supplying the city’s electricity, in addition to emissions from industries, brought shipping on the Thames to a standstill. Masked conductors holding flashlights walked in front of double-decker buses to guide them down London streets.
“With all the scientific advances, technological innovations, nutritional information, and the rise in public sanitation over the last 100 years, diseases should be close to extinction by now.”

His Master’s Voice
On March 10, 1876, Alexander Graham Bell spoke the historic words, “Mr. Watson, come here!” And the telephone was born. By 1879, only 250 people owned phones. The electric light industry began about the same time. Thomas Edison purchased the patent for an incandescent lamp that glowed for 40 hours, suitable for home use. In 1881, he built the first of hundreds of central stations supplying direct current to his customers.
In 1888, Nikola Tesla patented a spinning magnet adjacent to a wire powered by steam or a waterfall, which produced an electron surge through the wire. He called it Alternating Current (AC) since its direction reversed as the magnets spun. Tesla’s invention flooded American cities with affordable light. Viewers from a distance can still perceive this phenomenon of alternating current in city lights as they continuously flicker.
Firstenburg tells us, “In 1889, quite suddenly, the world was being electrified on a scale that could scarcely have been conceived. The telegraph had annihilated space and time. However, 20 years later, the electric motor made the telegraph look like a child’s toy and the electric locomotive was about to explode in the countryside.”
The Little Wood Stove
In the 1740s, Ben Franklin invented an iron wood-burning stove that could be built into fireplaces to maximize heat output while minimizing smoke and drafts. In his revelatory book, ‘Immortality,’ Dr. Joel Wallach says that this Pennsylvania Stove produced wood ash filled with plant minerals mixed with food as ‘culinary ashes!’ In addition, the ash was mixed with salt as a condiment, and the balance was mixed into lye soap or discarded into the compost to fertilize the garden.
Denuded Food
However, with the transition in America from wood to coal and then to electricity, the flow of wood ashes (plant mineral nutrition) that had supported human development began to be pinched off. Incorporating wood ashes into food produced stronger, taller, healthier, more fertile, more creative, and longer-lived humans.
Dr. Wallach explains that most food is now anemic, grown on chemically enhanced anemic ground. We require 90 essential nutrients with every mouthful of food, each meal, and every day: 60 essential minerals, 16 essential vitamins, 12 essential amino acids, and 3 essential fatty acids.
In his outstanding book EMF*D, warning of the 5G menace, Dr. Joseph Mercola says, “The relationship between the rise in electrification and chronic diseases follows an eerily similar trajectory and presents a compelling reason why this electrification—and the expansion of devices that emit EMF that came along with it—is one of the primary reasons for the epidemic of chronic disease that we are now experiencing.”
In the probative book ‘Silent Killers,’ Jennifer C. Brower quotes the insight of Brian Clement, the co-founder of Hippocrates Wellness: “Electro pollution is a well-researched and established fact that impacts our overall health. Close proximity to electric plants, high-tension wires, 5G, and even wall sockets weakens one’s endurance, adding to the potential of increased symptoms and disease.”
The Blue Zones
Dr. Dan Buettner, author of Blue Zones, believes there are four places on earth where people successfully live over 100 years of age. And if people anywhere were to apply their basic principles, humans everywhere could live beyond 100. For example, in Hunza today, doctors have concluded that the leading cause of premature death amongst Hunzakut people is from accidents! Doctor Wallach, in Immortality, confirms that mineral-rich diets, found universally in all Blue Zones, are an absolute requirement to reach the centenarian club. A high protein, low carbohydrate diet is relatively forgiving of a low vitamin intake but unforgiving of a low mineral diet.
Gunsmoke
This may be why people feel nostalgic about movies like Lost Horizon (1937), set in Shangri-La, a mythical location in the Himalayas inspired by another Blue Zone, Tibet. Western movies also depict a simpler, off-grid time without electricity, except perhaps the telegraph. In the TV series GUNSMOKE, there are no telephones, automobiles, electric lights, washing machines, or microwave ovens. It is still a mystery how Kitty, the proprietor of the Long Branch Saloon, kept Matt’s beer cold in the summer Kansas heat. Even at the height of the Cold War, biographers tell us that Joseph Stalin himself was enamored of American Western movies, habitually watching them from late night into the early morning in the darkened Kremlin while feasting with his closest allies. Western movies, like the Blue Zones, are attractive because of what is absent. Dr. Wallach says, “One of the unintended benefits of the Blue Zones is that they are remote and have little or no access to doctors, pharmaceuticals, French fries, fried foods, high fructose corn syrup, soft drinks, and white flour.” The reason restaurant food in civilized countries is so dangerous, even in the cuisine of the highest quality, is the unthinking use of dangerous oils such as canola, soybean, and cottonseed.
Energy Medicine
The good news is that out of all the thousands of random electromagnetic frequencies produced, there are healthy frequencies that actually restore health. The paradox is that the technological advancements that delivered the onslaught of emissions on the human body also provided the antidote.
Ironically, in 1958, 6 years after the lethal fog in London, Israel Myers, who produced waterproof clothing for the US Navy in WWII, introduced the first London Fog raincoat at Saks 5th Avenue in New York at a price of $29.95. The company went public in the 1960s, and by the 70s, London Fog had its own stores and boasted that 2/3 of all raincoats sold in the US were London Fog.
The extraordinary technological development of the last 50 years has produced sophisticated instruments that now deliver restorative waves and corrective frequencies to Olympic athletes, NASA astronauts, celebrities, and NFL stars. The FDA has recently approved electric medicine technologies for treating brain cancer, anxiety and depression, incontinence, and cellular renewal.
On the other hand, allopathic medicine does not acknowledge energy activity in the body despite the publication of more than 40,000 studies focused on electromagnetic treatments. Yet electrocardiograms, X-rays, MRI, and EKG are widely used in diagnostic practice in traditional medicine. However, allopathic remedies, unlike Energy Medicine, are only biochemically based and often involve prescription medications with many side effects.
At Hippocrates Wellness, the Energy Medicine Department focuses on supporting the energy activity in the body by treating the individual with a variety of emissions, such as LED Lights, Red Light, Near and Far infrared, PEMF, neuro-acoustic therapies and vibrational therapies.
The addition of the Antiaging Bed™ products to promote sleep and cellular balance shows remarkable benefits for Hippocrates guests without side effects. The Energy Department has also recently introduced the Tesla Plasma Frequency Machine. This unique device contains more than 4 million frequencies related to mental states, diseases, parasites, metal toxicity, and specific cancers.
The guest reclines comfortably in an antigravity vibroacoustic chair and absorbs the emanations from the machine. This state-of-the-art energy treatment provides a powerful, noninvasive, energetic infusion of selective frequencies collected over the past century by physicians, virologists, bacteriologists, and immunologists. It contains the frequencies Nikola Tesla documented in his personal research, “If you want to know the secrets of the Universe, you must think in terms of Energy, Frequency, and Vibrations.” Professor Linus Pauling, Nobel Prize winner, said, “Pulsed electromagnetic frequency is a blessing for humankind from the infant to the geriatric.” And Albert Einstein said, “The future of medicine will be the medicine of frequencies.