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Vibrate

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The Most Important Book You'll Ever Read
A crisis approaches.
In 2005 Stephen Harrod Buhner released his ground-breaking medical herbology treatment Healing Lyme. That year, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta recognized an infection rate of only 20,000 new cases of Lyme disease in the U.S. per year. Harvard researchers disagreed, claiming the disease was vastly under-reported.
Ten years later, in 2015, Buhner released his 2nd Edition of Healing Lyme, expanded to include Chlamydia and other related diseases. By that year the CDC had revised its original Lyme figure upward by a factor of more than ten, to 300,000 new cases in the U.S. yearly (1 in 1000 Americans are now being infected each year). Researchers claim these diseases are still under-reported, that the number of new infections each year in the U.S. is already more than 1 million.
By 2025 these spirochete diseases will be infecting 1 in 100 people yearly, and by 2035, 1 in 10 — that is, 30 million people a year in the United States alone. Europe is in the same situation. Aches and pains, skin eruptions, gastroenteritis, tinnitus, brain fog, fibromyalgia, blindness, crippling rheumatoid arthritis, and many common supposedly incurable diseases are now being found to be caused by these organisms, no longer restricted to tick-borne transmission, but spread also by mosquitoes and biting flies, sexually between humans, or by petting one’s cat or dog.
Economist Martin Armstrong predicts the world’s economy will crash in 2032. Lyme experts have missed one major factor. These spirochete diseases like Lyme and Chlamydia have begun using the increasing magnetic radiation from our computers, televisions, and cell phones to grow faster. The higher frequencies at which these devices now operate depress human immune response, allowing these diseases to spread through the body more rapidly. People are finding their once minor symptoms are exacerbated by extended computer and television use, resulting, for example, in severe acne eruptions or a rush to the bathroom. Increased blood pressure has been documented after extensive computer use. When people are unable to work because they can’t safely use their devices, millions will starve.
Is there anything that can be done to reverse this growing disaster? Possibly not.
Chlamydia and Lyme are routinely undiagnosed by doctors who, because accurate tests for these diseases’ many serotypes do not yet exist, tell patients their symptoms are all in their heads.
Antibiotics are worse than useless. Under antibiotic treatment these stealth pathogens go dormant, then, when antibiotic therapy ceases, re-awaken to spread through the body again. Herbs and electronic technologies often succeed where antibiotics fail, so there is a cure. But as Miles A. Maxwell shows, people don’t merely enjoy using their electronic devices, they need them. To work. To live. Lengthening the time to cure. In Vibrate, even murder may not dissuade us from this path of self-destruction.
Maxwell’s story begins with an unusual death, and a light-hearted birthday celebration which rapidly becomes a full-blown murder investigation led by private investigator Naomi Soul and her associate Chloe Brown. Finally, an astonishing truth is revealed. In hot pursuit, Naomi fights to take the killers down, followed by an unprecedented court case.
Movie zombies and terminators pale in comparison with this emerging true-life public disaster.

321 pages, Kindle Edition

Published July 29, 2019

21 people are currently reading
13 people want to read

About the author

Miles A. Maxwell

12 books30 followers
An IFR certified private pilot, and student of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for more than 15 years, Miles speaks bits and pieces of ten languages, surfs, skis, sails and scuba dives.

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5 stars
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9 (26%)
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
37 reviews
August 20, 2020
a top-notch PI thriller

I had a lot of fun reading this book as the author did an excellent job of setting up the background and fleshing out the main characters. The plot moved along at a rapid pace, keeping the story tense.

Based on this author's research into RF radiation from electronic devices, I may give up reading Kindle books on my iPad. 😢

One star off for a sloppy proofreading job where to many simple plurals were mistakenly decorated with apostrophes (jury's) or the wrong use of who's instead of whose, it's instead of its. Also, in the same paragraph, the prosecutor was named Stuart and Stewart. Finally, a good proofreader should know the difference between "discrete" and "discreet", and "plum" and "plumb."

Overall, this was a great technothriller with truly despicable villains. Very highly recommended.
Profile Image for Veronica Flowers.
95 reviews
August 13, 2021
Great storyline mystery

This was a very interesting private detective mystery book. I don't have anything bad to say about it just that I couldn't stop reading it. It really keeps you going until the end.
137 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2021
This is a Great Book

Well written. Great characters. Story held my interest. Hard to put down. Definitely read more of this authors books!
Great job.
Profile Image for Theresa Wells.
9 reviews
December 29, 2019
A thriller!!

Masterful plot! Couldn’t put it down. Looking forward to the next Naomi Soul mystery. I will start reading other novels by this author.
Profile Image for Lisa Fitzgerald.
18 reviews
September 3, 2019
An Education By One Of The Great Authors Of Our Time

I haven't written a review on a book in so long, I can't remember. But in this case I was indeed compelled!
It's been awhile since I read any of Mr. Maxwell's books, but if his past ones were any foretell of  future events, then I was certainly in store for an exciting ride.
As I read the blurb for the book, I was extremely intrigued. I had never read such a unique, general synopsis for a book before.
I was not disappointed...
Rather, I was educated.
As always, a great deal of research goes into his books, and he didn't disappoint in this instance, either.
Without going into to much detail, (because I really don't want to spoil the plot for you) your mind will be blown by the time you're done reading this.
Let's just say, I sure miss the good old days.
Mr. Maxwell's writing style can certainly be compared to some of the greats. As far as the editing is concerned, (I'm no professional by no means, but I am a voracious reader, so something like that sticks out for me) I'd have to say, the book gets an A+, because I only noticed a few discrepancies.
After reading all of Mr. Maxwell's other books, this is his best work yet. If you've read any of his books, then you know they're all connected, in some way. So I wait patiently for his next book, 'Buying Reason'...
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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