1 minute of video, start at 8:23. Two examples of small amounts of magnetic material pulled through the skin.
(www.bitchute.com)
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The material from the patch is going to be analyzed.
Once this gets seen, I expect better videos to emerge.
My wife had her second Pfizer experimental injection last week. (Yes, she's a high-IQ intelligent idiot.) Today I took a small but powerful neodimum magnet and placed it on her arm. It failed to stick. There was no attraction whatsoever.
Oh, and I haven't suffered from any "shedding" symptoms whatsoever.
Just for the record.
Following up. From Jimstone.is
WE JUST GOT STRONG INTRINSIC EVIDENCE THAT 60 PERCENT OF THE COVID SHOTS ARE SALINE and that's approximately the ratio of "I am fine" to maimed they need to keep their plausible deniability afloat. Here is what happened: A youtuber set up a "magnet challenge" site on a public street,
The YouTube video has been removed.
If she hasn't suffered any effects of the injection then maybe she got saline injected.
Yet. Wait until flu season before you or her get real comfortable.
The rare earth magnets can be wickedly strong. If you're not careful with how you store them they're almost impossible to separate. It would not surprise me at all if they could pull material through skin.
Still if this is a thing I'm shocked that there are not better quality and more rigorous videos emerging.
Magnets sticking to people is a thing. Having material pulled out, these are the first two until others turn up.
Drip, drip, drip until the floods get here.
Only in 10th grade when the first day of Chemistry my teacher emptied a box of Total into a container of water and used a magnet on a string to fish it out.