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Katie B 4 hr ago
My spouse snuck out on me to get it. Then told me he had as if I should be proud of him. It was like getting a kick to the stomach. I literally reeled backward from this news. I begged him not to get the followup. He did anyway. I know because the magnet stuck in both places. We don't talk about it now. I don't ask if he got the booster. He won't listen. So I guess I just hope for the best. He's under the spell. No point in making any suggestions now. I told him that our children WILL be left alone. He doesn't dare cross me on that one. I really might kill him if the children were poisoned.
Patrick Killelea Writes Anti-mandate Links and Memes 3 hr ago
Holy cow, the magnet sticking thing is true?
Katie B 3 hr ago
Sadly, yes. I didn't believe it either until I saw for myself. I could pinpoint both injection sites. And the polarity matters. The magnet would flip to get the poles aligned. My husband was annoyed and exclaimed "That's enough". I was surprised he let me perform the experiment, so he was a good sport on that count. (P.S. I tried also to verify the bluetooth claim. Nope. Nothing. Not confirmed. He is not broadcasting via bluetooth that I can tell.)
C19 Vials Ribbons are Microchip Connecting Highways That Develop In Days. New Stunning Darkfield Microscopy Images
Ana Maria Mihalcea, MD, PhD
Well, holy shit, maybe those reports of magnets sticking to the injection site were correct. It sounded pretty hokey, but now I'm not so sure.
https://coronanews123.wordpress.com/2021/09/02/japan-pulls-1-6-million-covid-shots-over-magnet-properties-and-possible-graphene-oxide-transhuman-agenda-recalled/
I don't see how. You'd have to have an AWFUL lot of ferromagnetic material to react with a magnet.
richwicks says
I don't see how. You'd have to have an AWFUL lot of ferromagnetic material to react with a magnet.
Could it be something collecting and concentrating iron from the red blood cells?
It's totally possible to detect magnetism from an inch though, especially with the latest rare-earth super-magnets.
Once I totally destroyed a laptop hard drive by putting it on my lap when I had one of those super-magnets in my pocket.
It's totally possible to detect magnetism from an inch though, especially with the latest rare-earth super-magnets.
Why not kill two birds with one stone? Load up a compass app or Physics Toolbox on your phone, and use the phone's magnetometer to scan for magnetic sites on the arm. As a bonus, you can set your phone's bluetooth to pairing mode and see if you can connect to the graphene nanobots.
Peer-Reviewed Study Documents Post-Vaccine Magnetism
Magnetism appeared months after mRNA injection—Pfizer “F” lots were disproportionately linked, with proposed mechanisms involving spike-induced iron metabolism disruption.
The study titled, Clinical Manifestations of Iatrogenic Magnetism in Subjects After Receiving COVID-19 Injectables: Case Report Series, was just published in the International Journal of Innovative Research in Medical Science:
Abstract
A series of cases of COVID-19 vaccine-injected patients suffering from iatrogenic magnetism is described. The attachment of massive metallic objects (up to 70 grams) to different parts of the body is a real phenomenon that may present additional health risks if such patients are subjected to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The iatrogenic magnetism phenomenon typically appears several months after the injection. More likely, injected DNA plasmids, or modified mRNAs, translated into the spike protein, or into junk peptides formed through frameshifts, may engender proteins with ferromagnetic properties, or may entrap endogenous iron. Importantly, the spike protein has a distant homology to hepcidin, the key regulator of iron metabolism. Redistribution of iron into the brain or other body parts may be causing iatrogenic magnetism. Pfizer vaccine lots starting with the letter “F” may be involved, although we cannot exclude the possibility that Moderna or other manufacturers’ injections may also cause this phenomenon. In our observation, the magnetism may resolve spontaneously or when nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is applied. Our pilot observation needs to be corroborated in a larger cohort study. ...
Case 1:
A 53-year-old male with no prior magnetism developed magnetic adhesion of a 25g object to both temples about 15 months after receiving two Pfizer injections (lots EY3014 and FE3065). He experienced chest pain, arrhythmia, full-body tremors, cognitive impairment, and other systemic symptoms.
Case 2:
A previously healthy 39-year-old female developed magnetism in her forehead and right shoulder—at the injection site—around one month after receiving a single Pfizer dose (lot FL4574). A 42g metal object adhered to her forehead, causing pain; symptoms lessened with alcohol and intensified during grounding.
Case 3:
A 28-year-old female developed magnetism approximately 20 months after receiving two Pfizer injections (lots FE2296 and FH0161). A 45g metal object adhered to her forehead, temple, and chest, but the magnetism faded over time, possibly due to self-initiated NAD⁺ therapy (500 mg/day).
Case 4:
A 28-year-old male reported magnetism of a 42g metal object to his left temple and ribcage around 20 months post-injection with both Pfizer (lot FH9951) and Moderna (lot 3004494). Cognitive symptoms and visual disturbances during MRI resolved with NAD⁺, but relapsed after discontinuation.
Case 5:
A 32-year-old previously healthy male—spouse of Case 2—developed magnetism two months after receiving the Pfizer vaccine (lot FL4574). A 70g metal object adhered to his forehead, chest, and shoulder opposite the injection site, with no improvement from food or medication.
Case 6:
A 36-year-old female developed strong magnetism (~25g object adherence to her sternum) one month after receiving Pfizer and Moderna vaccines (lots 1F1012A and 3006274). Her unvaccinated 10-year-old son also developed similar chest-localized magnetism, raising the possibility of vaccine-related shedding.
The CDC Denies Magnetic Elements in COVID Injectables While DARPA Promotes Mind-Control Research with Magnetic Nanoparticles Migrated to the Brain
The CDC denies that COVID-19 injections from Pfizer, Moderna, or Novavax can cause magnetism, even at the site of the injection. The CDC claims that the three ferromagnetic metals consisting of iron, cobalt, and nickel, and the rare earth chemicals used in magnets cerium, hafnium, lanthanum, gadolinium, and erbium are not in the US approved injectables. However, a 2024 study using inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), detected all these and many other undeclared elements in lots of Pfizer, Moderna, and five other brands of COVID-19 injectables. By contrast with the CDC denials, James Giordano, who has become Director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), has argued since 2018 that the human brain is the battleground for DARPA’s “disruptive technologies” of warfare using magnetic nanoparticles delivered “intranasally, intravenously, or intraorally” all without surgery to achieve “mind-control” by adjusting the frequencies, power, and directionality of the electromagnetic forces. The science of magnetofection is little known but has been under development for decades. We explain it here and ask, could militarized experimentation with magnetic nanoparticles be involved in causing the documented outcomes of proteinaceous clotting, cardio-vascular conditions, strokes, new autoimmune diseases, unprecedented rapidly developing “prion diseases”, “turbo” cancers, and sudden deaths many of these occurring in otherwise young and healthy recipients of the experimental COVID-19 injectables? The research discussed in this paper implies that an affirmative answer cannot be ruled out.
Well, holy shit, maybe those reports of magnets sticking to the injection site were correct. It sounded pretty hokey, but now I'm not so sure.
https://coronanews123.wordpress.com/2021/09/02/japan-pulls-1-6-million-covid-shots-over-magnet-properties-and-possible-graphene-oxide-transhuman-agenda-recalled/