Just this past week I've seen two things. "Alternative"news sources with links to stories and videos of magnets sticking to the jab site of people's arms. A hard push back from known disinformation sites like Lead Stories and Snopes, and mainstream saying it's fake. But they are debunking it by getting quotes from scientists, not by taking a magnet to a recent jab.
So which is it? I've tried some digging, but all I'm getting on duck duck go is heavy interference.
I'm skeptical because I'm thinking, wouldn't this have come out earlier if true, the jab has been out a while. But some of the reactions of people I saw when the magnet stick appeared genuine. And a quick instance of genuine fear, like wtf is in my body fear.
Which made me think, what greater way for people to wake up, than see they are the experiment. The ending won't be for everyone.
But is it every jab, or just a certain one, that is claiming this phenomena?
Any one here got some good leads to either prove or disprove this story? I only came across it this week, is it that new or is it older?
So for anyone who does not know: the store alarms are simple magnetic fields generated near the doorway by those hoops each side. The stickers placed on goods are nothing more than coils which react to the magnetic field, have a voltage induced in them, which makes the coil setup its own field, which disturbs the original field from the hoops, this is detected and the alarm sounds. The stickers might be purely dumb coils or they might use the induced voltage to power a circuit that broadcasts a code - this an RFID chip.
If people are setting off the alarms (unconfirmed), then that can only mean somehting conductive is within the body, or something passively magnetic that can disturb the alarm field.
It does seem unlikely, but is definitely not impossible.
I was shopping in London one time many years ago. As I left Selfridges the alarm went off and a security guard stopped me. The weather was not cold and I was staying just around the corner so I was wearing only light trousers and a thin short sleeve shirt, so I guess he could see I was not like hiding stolen merch under my coat or anything.
Guard was pretty cool about it and we tried a few things like I went back in and back out of the door a few times with and without my wallet, phone, and so on but each time the alarm sounded. Never did find out what it was but it was obvious I didn't steal anything so I went on my way. So just sayin these shop alarms can be weird and buggy.
Never in my life have I seen an RF sticker with any intelligence (aka circuit board). They are all either the white long stickers .25 by 1.5 inches long and .125 inches tall, or those squarish coils stickers that are flat. None of them are smart, they've all dumb passive stickers...
You'll need a magnifying glass and a sharp eye. They are around 0.4mm and contain all the components and have just two connections, to the antenna. They are powered from the antenna and transmit receive via it also. IF the shop can deactivate it and it remains on the goods when you leave, then it has some sort of circuit, which might be extremely basic or might have 4 lots of memory, some can hold a decent bit of data, and are be re-writable.
If the shop removes the tag, it might be just a dumb "ringer" coil as you say.
That's not true. You can deactivate those white chocolate bar shaped ones easily, and all they are is two pieces of metalized plastic inside, not a single wire or chip... Plus any "smart" ones will cost s shitload more than the cheap dumb ones.
There are RF tags, and there are RFID tags.
If there is an ID (it transmits a unique identifier) then it has a "chip" but the chip is very small, you might have missed it.
here is an explainer: https://www.explainthatstuff.com/rfid.html