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.
Awesome username! We didn’t try other objects, but we tried other subjects (people) with the same magnet. Even different parts of arms and it would fall straight off. Multiple negative possibilities with the same magnet. Dude was standing up straight. The magnetism wasn’t super strong, and if we got about 1/4 inch, maybe less leeway than that, the magnet slid straight off. When the hotspot was found though, it would stay on. We didn’t make him jump around or anything, I suspect it would slide off then too... the field isn’t super strong, but it exists. I should weigh that magnet. I doubt it weighed much, but it had extra plastic on it, like the clear pink UFO looking discs you can put on magnetic whiteboards. I’m gonna go throw a chunk of wood at him and see what happens, he’s a pretty chill guy. Wish me luck!
Good luck! This is important to check because you may be observing an effect that really is specific to the vaccine site, but not magnetism. The amount of material in a vaccine dose is so small (0.3ml) that it really shouldn’t be able to create an observable magnetic effect, regardless of what’s in there, so I’d save that as a sort of explanation of last resort. One possibility is that either the healing skin at the injection point or the immediately surrounding skin (because of inflammation or irritation) is holding more moisture and therefore more adhesive than your friend’s normal skin. If it’s something like that you may be able to produce a similar effect with a nonmagnetic object like a coin.
I’ll try with the coin if he’s out drinking again tonight:) I also just bought some Neodymium magnets. Because reasons, and I’m having fun with this. 10 bucks on Amazon. I know I’m breaking rules giving them money, but dammit it’s handy.
But first I want to try something with similar weight and surface area for the moisture deal like you said.
That said, I saw that little magnet ‘suck’ the last little 1/32 inch to where it wanted to be. Frickin crazy. Still gotta rule it out.
Fun!!
Probably more effort than it’s worth, but you can get a handheld gaussmeter for under $200. If you have any friends who are into electronics, either professionally or as a hobby, they might have one. The advantage, of course, being this lets you directly measure whether there’s a stronger magnetic field, rather than relying on “does it stick?” which could be caused by a magnetic field, but also by other things.