What are the left-tards on reddit saying about this? It seems to me that if they were really having magnets stick to them, then they would be howling about how "Trumps vax did this to them, reeeeee!" But I haven't heard anyone yeowling about that, so...
Hm. Indirect proof that it's a hoax to frame anti-vaxxers as crazies. And if my theory is correct, a coordinated propaganda hoax. A coordinated propaganda campaign that can be traced, and triangulated to discover the origins of this propaganda, and the network that started it. Too much homework for me to do, but hopefully some entity is already tracking that down.
Not a hoax, but it's harmless unless you overdose on iron. Understand the term "nanocarrier." Understand the implications that lead to Covid-19 susceptibility:
Serum iron deficiency was detected in the patients with COVID-19. The severity and mortality of the disease was closely correlated with serum iron levels. Low serum iron concentration was an independent risk factor for death in COVID-19 patients.
Low iron = susceptibility to Covid-19.
What food has a lot of iron in it? Red meat.
What food strangely faced strange shortage problems during the Covid-19 assault on our country?
I have yet to observe the alleged magnetism phenomenon with my own eyes. I know of no one personally who has experienced, seen, or personally knows of anyone who has experienced the phenomenon. 10 second video clips on youtube making silly claims, with kids laughing in them does not equal extraordinary proof.
Therefore, I conclude that it is internet bullshit, and a hoax. Moreover, I assert that this particular hoax is orchestrated propaganda designed for an agenda- to make anti-vaxxers look like idiots.
What are the left-tards on reddit saying about this? It seems to me that if they were really having magnets stick to them, then they would be howling about how "Trumps vax did this to them, reeeeee!" But I haven't heard anyone yeowling about that, so...
Hm. Indirect proof that it's a hoax to frame anti-vaxxers as crazies. And if my theory is correct, a coordinated propaganda hoax. A coordinated propaganda campaign that can be traced, and triangulated to discover the origins of this propaganda, and the network that started it. Too much homework for me to do, but hopefully some entity is already tracking that down.
https://europepmc.org/backend/ptpmcrender.fcgi?accid=PMC5831262&blobtype=pdf
Not a hoax, but it's harmless unless you overdose on iron. Understand the term "nanocarrier." Understand the implications that lead to Covid-19 susceptibility:
https://academic.oup.com/ofid/article/7/7/ofaa250/5860447
Low iron = susceptibility to Covid-19.
What food has a lot of iron in it? Red meat.
What food strangely faced strange shortage problems during the Covid-19 assault on our country?
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/05/07/heres-why-meat-shortages-are-likely-to-last-during-the-pandemic.html
Extraordinary claims, require extraordinary proof..
I have yet to observe the alleged magnetism phenomenon with my own eyes. I know of no one personally who has experienced, seen, or personally knows of anyone who has experienced the phenomenon. 10 second video clips on youtube making silly claims, with kids laughing in them does not equal extraordinary proof.
Therefore, I conclude that it is internet bullshit, and a hoax. Moreover, I assert that this particular hoax is orchestrated propaganda designed for an agenda- to make anti-vaxxers look like idiots.