Research Magnetofection.
Also: https://link.springer.com/protocol/10.1007%2F978-1-4939-0410-5_12
Video #3 of 3: https://odysee.com/@TimTruth:b/Magnetgateprt3-1:9
Research Magnetofection.
Also: https://link.springer.com/protocol/10.1007%2F978-1-4939-0410-5_12
Video #3 of 3: https://odysee.com/@TimTruth:b/Magnetgateprt3-1:9
so we can expect the magnets to stop sticking over time..
i will keep checking my moms arm evry few dAYS till it stops sticking
That's what I'm thinking. It will be an interesting test.
i saw another page with this same info but it was much more technically worded
but this is the best "answer" i have seen yet as to why magnets stick.
I'm a scientist and have to step in here. The covid-injections are not a surface "blister" type injection; they are into the muscle. No magnet is going to detect/be affected by, even visible magnetic particles if injected that deep, let alone microscopic particles. The fact that the covid serum is transparent indicates any particles are too small to see, and therefore, would comprise a mass so insignificant as to require some super magnetic detector, and certainly not cause a magnet to stick to someone's skin! Try the same magnet anywhere else, and you will get the same results.
Never start your explanation with " I am a scientist". Best way to lose credibility. Fauci claims the same thing ya know. If you give sound facts you are worthy of consideration with out that title.
I’m also a scientist. I watched several videos of this. Many did try the magnet on other areas of their bodies. It only stuck to the jab area. You need to explain that before you get on ur high horse. https://www.bitchute.com/video/FApEqfMvbOYw/
I’m not advocating for or against. Merely stating that phdinNY is in error stating that the magnets would stick anywhere on the skin. I would want more data, preferably in person before I made any conclusions. You dismiss, out of hand, before looking at any possible reasons why this might be true (I’ve also read many first-hand accounts—are all these people simply lying?). Here is one possibility: https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2015/nr/c5nr01404b#!divAbstract https://www.researchgate.net/publication/261517315_Superparamagnetic_Nanoparticle_Delivery_of_DNA_Vaccine
sometimes science has no explanation for the observed.
What is sounds like you are saying is that despite hundreds of recorded video evidence from people of all walks of life, economic status, race, and country, that since it theoretically can not happen, therefore it is not happening.
Video evidence can not be trusted sir.
I agree. A couple a videos by clever people skilled in such a deception could fool many people.
However, like I said, when many videos appear from people from all walks of life that show the same thing, then we are talking about something different.
Video #3 of 3: https://odysee.com/@TimTruth:b/Magnetgateprt3-1:9
I agree the magnet stuff makes no sense. And posting stuff like that takes away credibility.
None of the recorded vids I saw convinced me. They never properly move their arms to show it stick.
Obviously you didn't watch the linked video. The (presumed) magnet was released from a distance (unknown) onto a (nearly) vertical surface, and not placed, There is clearly a visible attraction (resembling magnetism) that exceeds the parameters of your licking hypothesis.
Video #3 of 3: https://odysee.com/@TimTruth:b/Magnetgateprt3-1:9
I haven't managed to stick it to my wife since she volunteered for the experiment.
The magnet, I mean. <blush>
More evidence? Forst thing I've seen that could even be reviewed as evidence. It's not evidence yet and may not rise to the level of evidence. Just an article and a bunchnof videos that some look like it could be and some do not.
Video #3 of 3: https://odysee.com/@TimTruth:b/Magnetgateprt3-1:9
Yawn. Wake me up when one of them manages to get on to Alex Jones' show.