To my way of thinking, any material in the solution that would cause a magnet to stick wouldn't be present at the injection site for very long, it would get carried around to infect the rest of the body. Then we have the weight of the magnet, strength, type and amount of magnetic material inside the jab that will all contribute to whether it would stick or not.
To top it off, I recall seeing pictures of people sticking metal flatware to themselves (as a trick or maybe true) for years. Maybe there are people that are magnetic to begin with. If they didn't try and stick a magnet there before, they don't really know if it was a recent development or not.
From the video's I have seen, it seems to be only those that are less than a week or so since the shot that have a chance to stick.
That is a not scientific measurement on a maybe it happens third hand observation, so take it with a grain of iron.
To my way of thinking, any material in the solution that would cause a magnet to stick wouldn't be present at the injection site for very long, it would get carried around to infect the rest of the body. Then we have the weight of the magnet, strength, type and amount of magnetic material inside the jab that will all contribute to whether it would stick or not.
To top it off, I recall seeing pictures of people sticking metal flatware to themselves (as a trick or maybe true) for years. Maybe there are people that are magnetic to begin with. If they didn't try and stick a magnet there before, they don't really know if it was a recent development or not.