Covid 19 Vaccine MAGNETIC At Injection Site

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I--flat out--don't believe any of this magnet garbage.

I work in in healthcare at a hospital, and I've not only been vaccinated myself, but I've helped vaccinate countless patients and staff members.

At any number of times, patients have been vaccinated within minutes to hours of going to an MRI, as an MRI is a standard medical imaging test for many different diseases and injuries.

The magnetic field in an MRI is many thousands of times stronger than the Earth's natural magnetic field. When I worked as a medic, a coworker thoughtlessly brought a steel oxygen cylinder into the MRI room, and they had to close the machine for the better part of a day as they had to get a special winch to pull the oxygen cylinder out of the MRI machine.

I abandoned steel-toed boots for this reason, as some steel-toed boots can make you fall around an MRI because you feel the tugging and pulling on your feet (depending upon what kind of steel is used to make the steel toes).

If there were magnetic particles and/or other magnetic substances in the vaccines, then there would be certian specific consequences with patients in MRI machines . . . and everybody (including myself) would know about it. You wouldn't be able to keep such an odd thing under wraps in a hospital, as we'd all be talking about it.

People gossip, nurses, technicians, and/or doctors often consult with each other on oddball circumstances that occur when rendering patient care, and so forth. People in healthcare like to discuss strange patient care findings, as we have a tradition of pooling our experience and knowledge. When I was a medic, an ambulance crew brought a hermaphroditic patient (an intersex patient) who was equipped with both male and female gentitalia to the hospital emergency department.

This crew gave these details in the radio report (we call the hospital ER with a radio report to give advance notice to allow the ER staff to prepare for the patient), and when they arrived, the ER was filled with students, nurses, and doctors . . . all of whom wanted to participate in patient care of this hermaphrodite . . . and everyone was talking about it for months.

If there was a magnetic property in the vaccines, I think I--personally--would know and/or have heard something about it, and I haven't.

This doesn't mean that I think that the vaccines don't have issues . . . just that they aren't magnetic.

Perhaps Dr. Jenner could weigh in on my arguments? If anyone disagrees with my reasoning, then please let me know.
 
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I--flat out--don't believe any of this magnet garbage.

I work in in healthcare at a hospital, and I've not only been vaccinated myself, but I've helped vaccinate countless patients and staff members.

At any number of times, patients have been vaccinated within minutes to hours of going to an MRI, as an MRI is a standard medical imaging test for many different diseases and injuries.

The magnetic field in an MRI is many thousands of times stronger than the Earth's natural magnetic field. When I worked as a medic, a coworker thoughtlessly brought a steel oxygen cylinder into the MRI room, and they had to close the machine for the better part of a day as they had to get a special winch to pull the oxygen cylinder out of the MRI machine.

I abandoned steel-toed boots for this reason, as some steel-toed boots can make you fall around an MRI because you feel the tugging and pulling on your feet (depending upon what kind of steel is used to make the steel toes).

If there were magnetic particles and/or other magnetic substances in the vaccines, then there would be certian specific consequences with patients in MRI machines . . . and everybody (including myself) would know about it. You wouldn't be able to keep such an odd thing under wraps in a hospital, as we'd all be talking about it.

People gossip, nurses, technicians, and/or doctors often consult with each other on oddball circumstances that occur when rendering patient care, and so forth. People in healthcare like to discuss strange patient care findings, as we have a tradition of pooling our experience and knowledge. When I was a medic, an ambulance crew brought a hermaphroditic patient (an intersex patient) who was equipped with both male and female gentitalia to the hospital emergency department.

This crew gave these details in the radio report (we call the hospital ER with a radio report to give advance notice to allow the ER staff to prepare for the patient), and when they arrived, the ER was filled with students, nurses, and doctors . . . all of whom wanted to participate in patient care of this hermaphrodite . . . and everyone was talking about it for months.

If there was a magnetic property in the vaccines, I think I--personally--would know and/or have heard something about it, and I haven't.

This doesn't mean that I think that the vaccines don't have issues . . . just that they aren't magnetic.

Perhaps Dr. Jenner could weigh in on my arguments? If anyone disagrees with my reasoning, then please let me know.

Kevin, you are confused about what you speak. Learn the difference between iron oxide nanoparticles and solid metal in an MRI machine. Different types of nanoparticles are purposely used in patients for MRI scans.


Your examples and experiences in regards to all these vaccines are irrelevant unless they only pertain to the covid shots.

I could go on about the irrelevance of the rest of your normalcy bias, but that would be a waste of my time.
 
Kevin, we all respect and your medical knowledge and efforts to help people. All I would ask is you get a small magnet and try this yourself on people you vaccinate.
In a way . . . I have.

I have a Smith and Wesson Model 10 revolver (a 'K' frame) that has been fitted with a Magna-Lock safety device, so the gun can only be fired if I wear my magnetic rings on my fingers.

I was wearing them when I was vaccinating people (I forgot to take the rings off after a shooting session), and there was no indication that these magnets responded to anything.

I was able to handle the 10 dose vials with no issues.
 
Kevin, you are confused about what you speak. Learn the difference between iron oxide nanoparticles and solid metal in an MRI machine. Different types of nanoparticles are purposely used in patients for MRI scans.


Your examples and experiences in regards to all these vaccines are irrelevant unless they only pertain to the covid shots.

I could go on about the irrelevance of the rest of your normalcy bias, but that would be a waste of my time.
If there was any component in the vaccines that supported a magnetic field, then it would show up as an artifact on the MRI.

Even non-magnetic metal materials (such as surgical pins, fillings, and jewelery--if the patient forgets to remove a ring, necklace, or body-piercing stud) will show up as an "artifact" (which is a fancy name for static, or interference).

Please note that I never said that the vaccines are harmless, as it seems that some people have had severe blood clots and embolisms from the vaccines. I'm just denying that they are magnetic, for reasons that I've outlined.
 
Kevin, the ferrous material in the vaccine is iron oxide. This is used to coat the lipid envelope containing the mRNA so that it will permeate the cell membrane of the ribosomes which the mRNA uses and takes over to replicate the spike protein which stimulates anti-covid 19 antibodies. Now that this is know, the magnetic properties of this vaccine are understood. There may be instances in which a paramagnetic reaction occurs. Here is a wikepedia link for these nano-particles.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_oxide_nanoparticle
Either way, they should show up in an MRL. This the way the vaccine works and should not now be a mystery. The only real mystery is why you are not seeing this magnetic reaction. I have no explanation except maybe you have to wait for the vaccine to spread out a little in the arm OR the vaccine you are administrating is not an mRNA vaccine but a DNA vaccine. Do you know the type or name of the vaccine you are using?
 
I’ve tried the so called magnet test on various people who have had the phizer, moderna, and Johnson and jonhson, the magnets never stick. I’ve seen the videos and they are fake. Quit spreading lies.
 
Kevin, the ferrous material in the vaccine is iron oxide. This is used to coat the lipid envelope containing the mRNA so that it will permeate the cell membrane of the ribosomes which the mRNA uses and takes over to replicate the spike protein which stimulates anti-covid 19 antibodies. Now that this is know, the magnetic properties of this vaccine are understood. There may be instances in which a paramagnetic reaction occurs. Here is a wikepedia link for these nano-particles.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_oxide_nanoparticle
Either way, they should show up in an MRL. This the way the vaccine works and should not now be a mystery. The only real mystery is why you are not seeing this magnetic reaction. I have no explanation except maybe you have to wait for the vaccine to spread out a little in the arm OR the vaccine you are administrating is not an mRNA vaccine but a DNA vaccine. Do you know the type or name of the vaccine you are using?
I've worked with the Moderna and the Pfizer vaccines. I got two shots of the moderna vaccine, and the second shot made me miserable for almost 4 days . . . I felt worse than hammered sh--t, so I'm not someone who believes that the vaccines are as harmless as they are made out to be.

I had swollen lymph nodes all over my body, an uncomfortable rash, constant nausea and headache, some mild shortness of breath, and several other symptoms.

It bothered me especially bad because these symptoms were reminiscent of the prodromal syndrome that often occurs right after someone gets infected with HIV.
 
Both the Moderna and Pfizer are mRNA vaccines so non-magnetic results are a bit of a mystery. Could it be your ring's poles are top and bottom as the ring sits there on a table, off your finger? If so the body of the ring will neither be strongly positive or negative and may even inspire some paramagnetic reaction.
 
If there were magnetic particles and/or other magnetic substances in the vaccines, then there would be certian specific consequences with patients in MRI machines . . . and everybody (including myself) would know about it. You wouldn't be able to keep such an odd thing under wraps in a hospital, as we'd all be talking about it.
You are forgetting your "magnetism" Kevin!!! just because your credit card has a magnetic strip on the backside...does NOT mean it is itself "magnetic"...
The hard-drive on your computer is also functioning on a "magnetic" type of storing the information you impute...
The super-magnetic, plastic, nano-particles themselves are not so strong that they will react to your MRI machines magnetic field and "attract" you...BUT THEY WILL BE "DE-MAGNETISED" by the MRI maching just as you would ruin and make your credit card and hard-drive useless by making the magnet strip "blank" and not-readable...Gary
 
You are forgetting your "magnetism" Kevin!!! just because your credit card has a magnetic strip on the backside...does NOT mean it is itself "magnetic"...
The hard-drive on your computer is also functioning on a "magnetic" type of storing the information you impute...
The super-magnetic, plastic, nano-particles themselves are not so strong that they will react to your MRI machines magnetic field and "attract" you...BUT THEY WILL BE "DE-MAGNETISED" by the MRI maching just as you would ruin and make your credit card and hard-drive useless by making the magnet strip "blank" and not-readable...Gary
I don't doubt that at all. An MRI can destroy all kinds of computer information on tape, disks, and so forth.

My point is that--even if any computer information is wiped--the media itself will still show up on an MRI . . . so I still stand by my statements.

Incidentally, there are many people (in religious circles) whom believe that the vaccination is "the mark of the beast", because of businesses requiring evidence of vaccination from employees, customers, and so forth . . . since "no one may buy or sell unless he has the mark" or some such.
 
Both the Moderna and Pfizer are mRNA vaccines so non-magnetic results are a bit of a mystery. Could it be your ring's poles are top and bottom as the ring sits there on a table, off your finger? If so the body of the ring will neither be strongly positive or negative and may even inspire some paramagnetic reaction.
I don't know.

I do know that I have sensitive hands, as I do a lot of precise, nit-picky work with my hands, and I think I would notice if the ring was pulling because of magnetism.
 
I assume the MRI field has "de-magnetised" any--if present--nano particles in your vaccine and you are no longer in danger of being "grilled" by the 5 G mobile phone being turned on...lets all hope we are on the wrong track no matter what happens...Gary
 
Which brings to question "where is the control group?" Did the magnet stick to the injection site before the injection? Has anyone tried this? No. Does the magnet stick to the person's other arm? Does the magnet still stick to the injection site the next day? Isn't it much more likely that inexperienced pharmacists are breaking off a small portion of the needle in people's arms and not even realizing it? Are injection needles magnetic? Probably not, but I don't know.
Does a magnet stick to the vaccine while still in the vial? Has anyone tried this? Not likely.
If your going to look at this scientifically, you have to consider all these possible variants. Or, you can just believe what supports your agenda, whatever it might be.
 
Which brings to question "where is the control group?" Did the magnet stick to the injection site before the injection? Has anyone tried this? No. Does the magnet stick to the person's other arm? Does the magnet still stick to the injection site the next day? Isn't it much more likely that inexperienced pharmacists are breaking off a small portion of the needle in people's arms and not even realizing it? Are injection needles magnetic? Probably not, but I don't know.
Does a magnet stick to the vaccine while still in the vial? Has anyone tried this? Not likely.
If your going to look at this scientifically, you have to consider all these possible variants. Or, you can just believe what supports your agenda, whatever it might be.

Please, be my guest and begin your investigation.
 
I've worked with the Moderna and the Pfizer vaccines. I got two shots of the moderna vaccine, and the second shot made me miserable for almost 4 days . . . I felt worse than hammered sh--t, so I'm not someone who believes that the vaccines are as harmless as they are made out to be.

I had swollen lymph nodes all over my body, an uncomfortable rash, constant nausea and headache, some mild shortness of breath, and several other symptoms.

It bothered me especially bad because these symptoms were reminiscent of the prodromal syndrome that often occurs right after someone gets infected with HIV.

Sounds like a great thing to do to yourself voluntarily..... every few months. I decided to just get the covid, and get over it. I didn't experience anything like the horrors you went through.

Also, regarding the magnets. I know someone who did it and it stuck. I believe yours did not, and it likely has not for many others. I do offer this, the magnets have to be small, Neodymium Rare Earth Magnets. Not just any magnet will do. Remember, if there is anything metal in the shot it will be NANO particles and will require a very strong magnet, but not too heavy. Balance.

Also, I suspect, like many of our government's experiments, there will be a "test group". So, it is highly likely that the number of people that could get a magnet to stick (again, the RIGHT magnet) is a small percentage.

Kevin, I think your ring is way too heavy for it to stick, as there is just not enough metal under your skin, AND your ring's magnet is not nearly as strong as a neodymium rare earth magnet. If you have never used one, you wouldn't understand. They are incredibly strong in a very small piece.


Neodymium Rare Earth Disc Magnet Sample/Variety Pack N42 (17 Sizes) (totalelement.com)
 
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I'd like to, but I got my vaccination months ago. I just tried it, and didn't stick, as you would expect. It would be great for someone on this forum to try the "before and after" vaccination magnet and tell us the results. That would be much more credible for me than just "someone on the internet." I'm open minded. Everyone keep your ear open for a friend or relative that is about to get the vaccine.
 
I asked one of my co-workers who I knew had just gotten the vaccine about trying the magnet test. If she did try it, she never let me know the results, but I seriously doubt she would have. I think the ones here on this site that were willing to get the vaccine had already done so long before this started circulating around and was too late to try. I would be interested learning if this was accurate from someone I trusted verses "just someone" too. With what Robin posted though, I am willing to believe it may be possible, BUT if a person is "damp" due to perspiring the magnet will stick on a chest. Not sure about on an arm though.
 
Sounds like a great thing to do to yourself voluntarily..... every few months. I decided to just get the covid, and get over it. I didn't experience anything like the horrors you went through.

Also, regarding the magnets. I know someone who did it and it stuck. I believe yours did not, and it likely has not for many others. I do offer this, the magnets have to be small, Neodymium Rare Earth Magnets. Not just any magnet will do. Remember, if there is anything metal in the shot it will be NANO particles and will require a very strong magnet, but not too heavy. Balance.

Also, I suspect, like many of our government's experiments, there will be a "test group". So, it is highly likely that the number of people that could get a magnet to stick (again, the RIGHT magnet) is a small percentage.

Kevin, I think your ring is way too heavy for it to stick, as there is just not enough metal under your skin, AND your ring's magnet is not nearly as strong as a neodymium rare earth magnet. If you have never used one, you wouldn't understand. They are incredibly strong in a very small piece.


Neodymium Rare Earth Disc Magnet Sample/Variety Pack N42 (17 Sizes) (totalelement.com)

I have some of these magnets but I am not going to get vaccinated nor do I know anybody that is.
 

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