This is to inform members of this list of the passing away of Jim
Meissner at the age of 70 from cancer.  He is a member of this group
(though hasn't posted much for several years I believe).  He was an
inventor and sold a CS generator among other things.  He first
introduced me to silver which did in fact save my life, and I believe
is still what is keeping me alive.  The last several years of his life
were largely spent focusing on people with lyme disease and its
coinfections.  He invented a number of rife-type devices which have
profoundly benefited or even remitted a number of people with
lyme-related illness.  His forum on this topic will continue to be
carried by others.  He pursued alternative treatments, and got
significant results, but it seems the diagnosis may have just come too
late.  6 days before his passing, he willfully decided to stop the
fight.  He suffered no pain except the last 4 days of his life after
ceasing the use of his rife-type devices.

Below is a copy of his local obituary:

Juergen "Jim" Paul Meissner

Juergen "Jim" Paul Meissner, 70, died Tuesday, December 20, 2011 of
colon cancer at his residence in Afton.  He was preceded in death by
his parents and 3 grandchildren. He is survived by his loving partner,
Carol Monroe; and by two children from his first marriage, a son,
Thomas Meissner; a daughter, Suzanne Jacobs, and four grandchildren.

Born in Berlin, Germany, September 22, 1941, he was the son of the
late Hellmuth Meissner and Edith Maria Strauch Meissner. At age 11, he
migrated with his parents to Guelph, Ontario, then in 1956 to the
United States. Prior to moving to Nelson Country in 1997, he lived in
New Jersey and Arizona. He was a graduate of the Pennington School for
Boys (Pennington, NJ), and attended Phoenix College, (Phoenix, AZ),
and Arizona State University.

Jim accumulated all the tools and electrical gear he could. He put
together a workshop in the basement of the family home when he was in
his early teens, and added to it all his life. At age 16, he won first
place in the New Jersey State Science Fair for designing and building
a complete hi-fi system.

Jim always loved music. He acted and sang in professional theater,
sang in the Bach Madrigal Society and the Phoenix Symphonic Choir,
sang in the church choir and was in several musical plays. He was a
member of the touring choirs of Phoenix College and Arizona State
University. In 1960, he won the seldom-awarded Trudel Award for
excellence in music.

While attending college, he earned money by repairing radios,
televisions, and phonographs and building hi-fi systems and
enclosures. He opened a recording studio, designing and building all
the necessary electronic equipment. He later designed, patented and
built stereo speakers that worked on a new principle that resulted in
uniform sound regardless of placement.

After college, he was for many years employed as a consultant for
companies in the aerospace, electronics and health-care industries. In
addition to his consulting business, he purchased and for ten years
managed a company that made transistors and capacitors. Among the
companies he consulted for were Goodyear Aerospace Corp., North
American Aviation, Arizona Electronics Standards Lab, Julie Research
Laboratories,  RFL Industries, and many more.

Jim's unique understanding of how things worked, his incessant
curiosity, and his skill in researching and experimenting led him to
produce inventions in the fields of energy, health, and food
production. Always interested in enhancing human performance, he
developed ways to retrain the brain using electronics. One such
device, which he called the Brain State Synchronizer, could be used to
improve performance in sports and other activities.  He was the holder
of numerous patents.

Jim's greatest joy in life was helping people. Perhaps the most
important project of his later years was sharing the knowledge he had
acquired through research into the causes and treatment of cancer,
Lyme disease, and other ailments through personal contact and a health
forum he ran on the internet. Since his own illness became known, he
received hundreds of encouraging and grateful messages from people
from all over the country, saying how much he had helped them.

Condolences can be sent to http://meissnerresearch.com/contact/.  A
celebration of his life will be held in mid-January.

The family requests that memorial donations be made to the Hospice of
the Piedmont, 675 Peter Jefferson Parkway, Suite 300, Charlottesville,
VA 22911, in appreciation of their support through the last months of
his illness.


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