I didn’t buy it at first, I don’t do social media anymore, haven’t for a couple years. I don’t do SnapChat or Insta or TikTok. Wife is red-pilled harder than I am and I grew up this way. Lucky me! Even so, she showed me a video the other day of a hardcore lib TikTok influencer putting a magnet on his arm where he got the vax. She said it was totally out of character for him, but he had the stones to admit and share that he was worried and he regrets it. He was visibly concerned about his new found magnetism. Even after that, I was still skeptical of the magnetic stuff. I’m thinking “yeah, sure, the body has tons of metal in it, I take a multivitamin with a bunch of it...” Zinc, Iron,... our body uses that stuff. Maybe it’s in the suspension liquid in the vax.
So my conclusion with the TikTok lib was, it could be bs, or it could be magnetic, but it could be a lot of reasons why. I don’t care enough to really look it up.
My friends put a magnet on their injections today. Pfizer, both of them. It stuck. God Bless ‘em, I wish they would have waited, but I care about them and they’re good to go. I’m worried now.
I think we’re all awake enough to know that Googling it is a dead end. Why is injection site magnetic? Google: It isn’t. (I just flipping saw it. Yes it is.)
My question is, why? Really.
Is there an explanation in between “it isn’t” and “5g mark of the beast microchip that distorts your natural magnetic dimensional enlightened being’s ability to pass through the path of souls in Racine” (no offense to Simon Parkes or the Racine Parousia dude. Those were some hella rabbit holes. Okay, Simon can keep a liiiiitle of the shade, he seems to mean well, but sucker can embellish a little. Racine Parousia dude still gets full credit for a three day anxiety-ridden mind-eff of a dig. That was wild.)
Seriously, objectively, no more sarcastic jokes... what would make an injection site magnetic? This is weird.
I made a comment on a post last week that I had tried this on my father-in-law and my brother-in-law who got the Pfizer and J&J, respectively, and it didn't stick.
I'm not sure what to believe because I still haven't experienced it in person. It seems like there's enough anecdotal evidence to believe at least some people are now magnetic, but it's not past the "this guy on a Q message board said he saw it with his own eyes" for me yet, but with more examples like this, I'm starting to buy it.
My wife sure doesn't and now she doesn't believe any of my conspiracy theories anymore (and she's the one who woke me up because she's from Syria and loves Bashar, which made me come to terms with a lot about reality).
Why do we think some people have this and others don't? Is it really a timing issue? I tried on my relatives 1-2 weeks after they were jabbed.
Totally fair. I’m frustrated by it too. Nothing is consistent or makes sense anymore. All of our reasonable questions are outright ignored or denied.
I don’t know the answer, there are a lot of variables. Time, vaccine batch, storage temp, brand, depth of delivery? It could be a lot of things. All I would need that will likely never happen is some real researcher saying “Wow, that’s peculiar. We’re gonna look into that.”
Psaki doesn’t count, she’s lost that privilege.
Neighbor and I were theorizing the need for really cold, and if there was a correlation between the ‘mix’ of the fe3o4 and allowing higher temp storage. Maybe that is also correlated to the clots too... more iron salts for higher temp storage and transport means higher risk for blood issues? And you’re totally right with it being hit or miss, some people it didn’t stick at all, he said he was about 50/50 with the folks he tried out. Other neighbors got in on it, they had Prizer in January and neither of them were magnetic. Takes a while to disperse I suppose. Who knows! I sure as heck don’t!
I think the moral is, and most here know, it’s experimental! That’s why this stuff goes through years of evaluation before the FDA approves it. Also, we’ve got three brands with totally different mixes going around at the same time, messing with our ability to objectively associate issues with any individual one! Was the blood stuff not associated with Pfizer? J&J it was, right?
Who frickin knows.