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Magnets sticking to vaccinated arm spots.

Scott Downey

Well-Known Member
Compilation of Magnets Sticking to Arm after Covid Vaccination (bitchute.com)
HaHa, if this is true, then that should be a strong warning sign that this is not ok.

"The efficiency of delivery of DNA vaccines is often relatively low compared to protein vaccines. The use of superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIONs) to deliver genes via magnetofection shows promise in improving the efficiency of gene delivery both in vitro and in vivo."

Superparamagnetic nanoparticle delivery of DNA vaccine - PubMed (nih.gov)

GENE therapy vaccine
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
My wife is a nurse and she stuck a quarter (coin) to her patient's arm where she was jabbed. It's definitely magnetic.

JonC... I have no doubt about you being in darkness.
Your wife is a nurse and believes a quarter sticks to magnets? :Laugh


Here's a simple experiment:

Take a quarter and use a magnet to pick it up. Why does it not work?

US coins are made up of copper and nickel. Nickel is magnetic so US coins should be magnetic, but when checked, they came up to be non-magnetic. But why so? In copper-nickel alloy, we know copper is non-magnetic. US coins contain only 25 percent nickel and 75 percent copper. That’s why they are non-magnetic.


BTW, @NewMusic , the OP claims magnets stick to the arm, not quarters.

Maybe alien technology in the vacvine has made the vaccinated a different kind of human magnet so that the mothership can collect them at a future date.
 

NewMusic

Member
:Laugh:Laugh:Laugh:Laugh:Laugh This is hilarious. You guys made my morning :Thumbsup

I'm sure glad Iron oxide is a substance not naturally in the body....like on our blood...or we'd be walking refrigerator doors. :Roflmao:Roflmao

Ah...people carried away by "wives tells". It is sad some will believe this, but at the same time is very funny.

Covid-19 Vaccine Magnet Challenge: Videos Claim Magnets Stick To Arms After Vaccination

No, your Covid jab isn't magnetic

You are right. I forgot about that. I just tried a quarter with a very powerful magnet and the coin slid off. My wife does not lie, so I will explain what you just wrote to her when she gets home from work. But there has to be an explanation.


EDIT: Remote, but perhaps it was a 1964 quarter.

EDIT again. That would not do it either. Silver is not magnetic. <shaking head>
 
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JonC

Moderator
Moderator
You are right. I forgot about that. I just tried a quarter with a very powerful magnet and the coin slid off. My wife does not lie, so I will explain what you just wrote to her. But there has to be an explanation.
There is an explanation. Coins often stick to the skin due to oils in the skin. I have leaned my arm on a quarter that was lying on the table to find it stuck after I had walked away (more than once).

In fact, when I read the explanations I tried it and a dime (didn't have a quarter) stuck to my arm rather easily (I had a shower....not really oily and not on vaccinated arm). It fell off after about a minute, though.
 

Scott Downey

Well-Known Member
You are right. I forgot about that. I just tried a quarter with a very powerful magnet and the coin slid off. My wife does not lie, so I will explain what you just wrote to her when she gets home from work. But there has to be an explanation.


EDIT: Remote, but perhaps it was a 1964 quarter.

EDIT again. That would not do it either. Silver is not magnetic. <shaking head>
Yes, it was never about coins, just magnets only. I truly doubt the magnet story, it would take a very powerful magnetic attraction to stick a weak fridge magnet to your arm.
Those magnets are fairly heavy too. And the vaccine solution gets dispersed in the body, it does not concentrate or remain at the injection site, it mixes into body tissues, organs, migrates and have you seen how long the needle is? It is not a slightly under the skin surface injection.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
Yes, it was never about coins, just magnets only. I truly doubt the magnet story, it would take a very powerful magnetic attraction to stick a weak fridge magnet to your arm.
Those magnets are fairly heavy too. And the vaccine solution gets dispersed in the body, it does not concentrate or remain at the injection site, it mixes into body tissues, organs, migrates and have you seen how long the needle is? It is not a slightly under the skin surface injection.
And the iron oxide is natural to our bodies. People who take multivitamins (like me) take even more.

The needle is not long (it's like the needle for a flu shot - if you've ever gotten one. Just a standard needle for IM injection.
 

Andre

Well-Known Member
My wife is a nurse and she stuck a quarter (coin) to her patient's arm where she was jabbed. It's definitely magnetic.
What nonsense.

A quarter can stick to an arm for any number of reasons having nothing to do with magnetic vaccines. This idea that vaccines make you magnetic is a product of the fevered dreams of conspiracy theorists.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
It'd be pretty cool if hundred dollar bills were attracted to vaccinated people.
 
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