I don't think this is the cause of the apparent magnetic effect from the vaccine. These nanoparticles are used in magnetofection. It is a drug delivery system that uses external magnetic fields to keep these particles in place and/or guide them into cells where they can deliver their DNA/RNA cargo. There are then here two reasons why these are not likely what is causing the effect.
They are a completely separate technology for delivering genetic cargo into a cell. In other words, you don't need both these AND the mRNA or Ad26 technologies. They are a complete delivery system unto themselves.
They are useful when an external magnetic field is applied to guide them and/or hold them. Without that external (focused) EM field they are not useful for targeted delivery (their design purpose).
I don't know what is causing what appears to be a ferromagnetic response localized to the vaccine injection sites. I don't know if that is specific to a certain vaccine or if it is happening in all the vaccines. All I can say for sure is, none of the listed vaccine ingredients from either the Pfizer, Moderna, or J&J vaccines would cause such an effect.
My own experience with the magnet test were both Pfizer...... both were first dose... (although the vaccine is supposed to be the same with each dose)
So putting aside the reason, is it possible that the reason some aren’t holding magnets be because they are using variations and or placebos as part of a clinical trial....?
Indeed the arms that are holding magnets might not even be the vaccine as well as the other option?
is it possible that the reason some aren’t holding magnets be because they are using variations and or placebos as part of a clinical trial
The worldwide vaccine rollout is not a "clinical trial."
Its experimental, its not "an experiment." In experiments you keep really good records, if someone gets sick you make a very clear report of everything about it; diagnosis, treatments, everything. If someone dies you do an autopsy to find out exactly why.
In this however they are just giving out shots. There is no indication of placebo's. Even if some shots are saline solution there is no "control group" because there is no data being taken, at least not in any apparent way. Indeed there is no follow up whatsoever. VAERS has some stuff, but it's voluntary (data collection in an experiment is not voluntary), and there are huge incentives to not report to VAERS (money, malpractice, etc.). Previous reports on VAERS have put its underreporting at one report for each hundred real reactions. I don't think its that bad this time, but it is still almost certainly underreported by a fair amount. Thus, there is no good data, thus, this is not an experiment.
Could there be different things in the shots? Yes. At this point I am thinking that is certainly possible, though the evidence is only anecdotal, and that is insufficient to come to any conclusions. If that is the case though, that would be massively illegal, since that's not what people are signing up for. It goes from being propaganda to push getting the vaccine to straight up human experimentation without authorization, which generally carries a penalty of loss of everything, including life.
I don't think this is the cause of the apparent magnetic effect from the vaccine. These nanoparticles are used in magnetofection. It is a drug delivery system that uses external magnetic fields to keep these particles in place and/or guide them into cells where they can deliver their DNA/RNA cargo. There are then here two reasons why these are not likely what is causing the effect.
I don't know what is causing what appears to be a ferromagnetic response localized to the vaccine injection sites. I don't know if that is specific to a certain vaccine or if it is happening in all the vaccines. All I can say for sure is, none of the listed vaccine ingredients from either the Pfizer, Moderna, or J&J vaccines would cause such an effect.
My own experience with the magnet test were both Pfizer...... both were first dose... (although the vaccine is supposed to be the same with each dose)
So putting aside the reason, is it possible that the reason some aren’t holding magnets be because they are using variations and or placebos as part of a clinical trial....?
Indeed the arms that are holding magnets might not even be the vaccine as well as the other option?
WWG1WGA
The worldwide vaccine rollout is not a "clinical trial."
Its experimental, its not "an experiment." In experiments you keep really good records, if someone gets sick you make a very clear report of everything about it; diagnosis, treatments, everything. If someone dies you do an autopsy to find out exactly why.
In this however they are just giving out shots. There is no indication of placebo's. Even if some shots are saline solution there is no "control group" because there is no data being taken, at least not in any apparent way. Indeed there is no follow up whatsoever. VAERS has some stuff, but it's voluntary (data collection in an experiment is not voluntary), and there are huge incentives to not report to VAERS (money, malpractice, etc.). Previous reports on VAERS have put its underreporting at one report for each hundred real reactions. I don't think its that bad this time, but it is still almost certainly underreported by a fair amount. Thus, there is no good data, thus, this is not an experiment.
Could there be different things in the shots? Yes. At this point I am thinking that is certainly possible, though the evidence is only anecdotal, and that is insufficient to come to any conclusions. If that is the case though, that would be massively illegal, since that's not what people are signing up for. It goes from being propaganda to push getting the vaccine to straight up human experimentation without authorization, which generally carries a penalty of loss of everything, including life.