I know someone who is a liberal, pro-vaccine type who did this with a fridge magnet and it stuck. She thought it was hilarious. After the 3rd day, it no longer stuck.
I think she said it was Moderna. She did the magnet thing after her 2nd shot. She's a social media hound and wanted to get on the Tik-Toc and Twitter train that is pushing this weirdness.
Its possible the mRNA hits the injection site the most and causes that area to produce a lot of concentrated ferritin proteins. Then the rest of the mRNA disburses more evenly throughout the body. This would cause more iron to be at the injection site.
No one is claiming that everybody who took the shot can make a magnet stick to their arm.
The video evidence that so many people can make magnets stick would seem to indicate that the injection contains some kind of metal. Maybe those who cannot make a magnet stick to their injection site were injected more efficiently with whatever magnetic substance is in the formula.
Wow. The depop shot will literally kill me, slowly. Basically shred my organs over a couple years. My body can't get rid of ferritin, I have to get regular blood letting done to maintain healthy levels. Good thing I'm not a fucking sheep cuz I'd be dying right now if I were! Dayum!
So... since it did not work on you (just you saying so with no proof), that somehow negates the hour-long VIDEOS of many people showing that it does in fact happen to them...
Yes, tested it on two co-workers. Did my research on a limited sample. Realistically to me its bullshit, until I can confirm with my own two eyes. I watched the same video you did, the only difference is that I wanted to test it. One guy I tested this on wanted to make believe that it was actually sticking so he stuck his arm slightly so that it would stick. Attention seeker I assume, so I told him to drop his arm and it fell right off. So there is an argument to be made and say that attention seekers will fake something for the sake of being liked. Maybe the videos that I watched are a compilation of that kind of people.
When a lot of people are unable to recreate it, it means that at a minimum there's more nuance to whatever the situation is.
I value what little validation we'll be able to get from this forum. It'd make more sense to poll on liberal forums where very high % of readership are vaccinated.
I real test would begin immediately after one is jabbed, and continue to be tested throughout time. Basically, slap a magnet on someone immediately after the jab (multiple subjects from each manufacturer), then continue to slap magnet over time.
Friends husband, it stuck. Maybe some vaccines are placebo, random vials, after all they only want to depopulate and save the rest to produce income for them. Maybe something in their DNA, just like some having reactions but not all, some deaths but not all. Just as some people have allergies to a food but not all. Possibilities are endless, maybe those that magnets stick to are the most useful for 5G? Who knows?
So you dont have a job. Also, you have tested a whole lot of zero and therefore I should trust your conclusions more than mine. I hope you can see how cognitively dissonant that sounds.
I haven't drawn any conclusions. That's the whole point. I don't see how anybody can call BS on a claim when you have only tested the theory on a sample size of 2. You indeed could be correct, but you could be wrong. A data set of 2 is insufficient.
Like I said before, to me its bullshit until I can prove otherwise. I will keep testing. But for now the hypothesis is its bullshit. To reach a conclusion it doesn't mean its final, but to point out what you think is true based on empirical data. If the data shows me wrong I am more than happy to change my mind about the subject.
Is there maybe a time limit as well? I wouldn't assume it'd remain magnetic forever, but mainly early on. Just a guess though. Although the whole magnet thing could be bunk altogether, too.
If you’ve already been vaccinated, schedule your diagnostic imaging exam 6 to 10 weeks after your second COVID-19 vaccine dose.
If you need a diagnostic imaging exam that includes axillary lymph nodes for routine surveillance and screening, talk to your doctor to see if it is medically appropriate to delay the exam for 6 to 10 weeks after your COVID-19 vaccination. Your body’s immune response to the vaccine may cause temporary enlargement of your axillary lymph nodes that will need to subside to avoid interfering with your imaging exam.
The magnetic nanoparticles redistribute and end up in blood rich organs.. Probably targeted to the brain. Would have to ask Bill Gates, but doubt he would tell the truth.
Like I said before, to me its bullshit until I can prove otherwise. I will keep testing. But for now the hypothesis is its bullshit. To reach a conclusion it doesn't mean its final, but to point out what you think is true based on empirical data. If the data shows me wrong I am more than happy to change my mind about the subject.
The numerous anecdotes by apparently normal people is not so easily dismissed. The only thing I can say for certain is that none of the vaccines have ingredients listed that would cause what appears to be a paramagnetic or ferromagnetic field.
Do you think birth control implants could be a reaon for magnets sticking? The video I saw had a lot of woman and if they didn't want to get pregnant, they could have gotten something like that. And this site indicates that there are some metal implants out there: https://nypost.com/2018/04/11/fda-restricts-sale-of-painful-metal-birth-control-implant/
I know someone who is a liberal, pro-vaccine type who did this with a fridge magnet and it stuck. She thought it was hilarious. After the 3rd day, it no longer stuck.
Do you know which vaccine?
I think she said it was Moderna. She did the magnet thing after her 2nd shot. She's a social media hound and wanted to get on the Tik-Toc and Twitter train that is pushing this weirdness.
This is valuable info. I would need to find people recently jabbed.
Well the technology is real... they basically GMO an iron-holding protein called ferritin to the nerve cells by telling them to produce it.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/neurophilosophy/2016/mar/24/magneto-remotely-controls-brain-and-behaviour
Its possible the mRNA hits the injection site the most and causes that area to produce a lot of concentrated ferritin proteins. Then the rest of the mRNA disburses more evenly throughout the body. This would cause more iron to be at the injection site.
i agree, tried it on two of my bosses, one moderna and one pfeizer ... neither stuck
the pfeizer was also about a month old jab while the moderna was about 3 months ago
just tried last week with a magnet from the fridge
the sad part is they are so brainwashed that this only helped them believe i am the crazy one even more
No one is claiming that everybody who took the shot can make a magnet stick to their arm.
The video evidence that so many people can make magnets stick would seem to indicate that the injection contains some kind of metal. Maybe those who cannot make a magnet stick to their injection site were injected more efficiently with whatever magnetic substance is in the formula.
it tells the nerve cells to produce ferritin, an iron holding protein.
Wow. The depop shot will literally kill me, slowly. Basically shred my organs over a couple years. My body can't get rid of ferritin, I have to get regular blood letting done to maintain healthy levels. Good thing I'm not a fucking sheep cuz I'd be dying right now if I were! Dayum!
So... since it did not work on you (just you saying so with no proof), that somehow negates the hour-long VIDEOS of many people showing that it does in fact happen to them...
You have achieved peak moron. Congrats, I guess.
Yes, tested it on two co-workers. Did my research on a limited sample. Realistically to me its bullshit, until I can confirm with my own two eyes. I watched the same video you did, the only difference is that I wanted to test it. One guy I tested this on wanted to make believe that it was actually sticking so he stuck his arm slightly so that it would stick. Attention seeker I assume, so I told him to drop his arm and it fell right off. So there is an argument to be made and say that attention seekers will fake something for the sake of being liked. Maybe the videos that I watched are a compilation of that kind of people.
When a lot of people are unable to recreate it, it means that at a minimum there's more nuance to whatever the situation is.
I value what little validation we'll be able to get from this forum. It'd make more sense to poll on liberal forums where very high % of readership are vaccinated.
How many fridge magnets does it take to prove that the earth is not flat?
So... no argument then?
I real test would begin immediately after one is jabbed, and continue to be tested throughout time. Basically, slap a magnet on someone immediately after the jab (multiple subjects from each manufacturer), then continue to slap magnet over time.
Friends husband, it stuck. Maybe some vaccines are placebo, random vials, after all they only want to depopulate and save the rest to produce income for them. Maybe something in their DNA, just like some having reactions but not all, some deaths but not all. Just as some people have allergies to a food but not all. Possibilities are endless, maybe those that magnets stick to are the most useful for 5G? Who knows?
I tried it on my father in law and no magnetic stick
Two?A whole whopping two? That's a huge sample size to draw your conclusions from.
How many have you tested?
I don't mix with the vaccinated.So zero.
So you dont have a job. Also, you have tested a whole lot of zero and therefore I should trust your conclusions more than mine. I hope you can see how cognitively dissonant that sounds.
I haven't drawn any conclusions. That's the whole point. I don't see how anybody can call BS on a claim when you have only tested the theory on a sample size of 2. You indeed could be correct, but you could be wrong. A data set of 2 is insufficient.
Another conclusion that you have drawn from insufficient data.
It was meant to be a joke. Don't take it so hard, its not a dick.
Ok. Your joke went over my head. My mistake.
Like I said before, to me its bullshit until I can prove otherwise. I will keep testing. But for now the hypothesis is its bullshit. To reach a conclusion it doesn't mean its final, but to point out what you think is true based on empirical data. If the data shows me wrong I am more than happy to change my mind about the subject.
Is there maybe a time limit as well? I wouldn't assume it'd remain magnetic forever, but mainly early on. Just a guess though. Although the whole magnet thing could be bunk altogether, too.
Fake or not they tell you you can not have an MRI for 10 weeks after injection.
I will find it for you.
If you’ve already been vaccinated, schedule your diagnostic imaging exam 6 to 10 weeks after your second COVID-19 vaccine dose.
If you need a diagnostic imaging exam that includes axillary lymph nodes for routine surveillance and screening, talk to your doctor to see if it is medically appropriate to delay the exam for 6 to 10 weeks after your COVID-19 vaccination. Your body’s immune response to the vaccine may cause temporary enlargement of your axillary lymph nodes that will need to subside to avoid interfering with your imaging exam.
Source: https://www.mdanderson.org/cancerwise/7-things-to-know-about-the-covid-19-vaccine-mammograms-and-other-diagnostic-imaging-tests.h00-159459267.html
The magnetic nanoparticles redistribute and end up in blood rich organs.. Probably targeted to the brain. Would have to ask Bill Gates, but doubt he would tell the truth.
Only believe it if they also use baby powder.
Like I said before, to me its bullshit until I can prove otherwise. I will keep testing. But for now the hypothesis is its bullshit. To reach a conclusion it doesn't mean its final, but to point out what you think is true based on empirical data. If the data shows me wrong I am more than happy to change my mind about the subject.
The technology is real.
https://www.theguardian.com/science/neurophilosophy/2016/mar/24/magneto-remotely-controls-brain-and-behaviour
I think the magnetic effect comes from the “tampered” lot. There’s no other way to tell regardless.
Yes. It's BS
The numerous anecdotes by apparently normal people is not so easily dismissed. The only thing I can say for certain is that none of the vaccines have ingredients listed that would cause what appears to be a paramagnetic or ferromagnetic field.
Do you think birth control implants could be a reaon for magnets sticking? The video I saw had a lot of woman and if they didn't want to get pregnant, they could have gotten something like that. And this site indicates that there are some metal implants out there: https://nypost.com/2018/04/11/fda-restricts-sale-of-painful-metal-birth-control-implant/