Why are a number of people becoming magnetic after receiving their covid jabs?

Of course, it is a trick,
Okay. Thank you for your thoughts.

It is sad that you have gone through life not seeing people do that before. https://gizmodo.com/human-magnets-are-actually-just-really-greasy-5771510
I've seen people do similar things before. My younger cousin, for example, was able to get her phone to stick to the side of her arm (as she stood in an upright manner). She is not magnetic and neither is her phone case that her phone was in at the time. I suspected that this phenomenon had something to do with her skin at that particular moment (maybe it was extra sticky/oily/greasy/super smooth/whatever).

However, the videos that I have watched are NOT cases like that... For instance, I've seen a person slowly put a small magnet up against another person's COVID shot injection site and watched the magnet suction itself onto that other person's skin (iow, it was not pressed onto that person's skin with any sort of force; it literally suctioned itself in as it would do when a person would put a magnet onto their fridge). I then watched the same person have to use some force in order to peel the magnet back off of the other person. I then watched the same person attempt to get the magnet to stick an inch or two below the injection site and the magnet acted as it would if you'd attempt to put it against any other non-magnetic surface (it just instantly slid right off). Then, that same person would take the magnet and put it back over the other person's injection site and it would suction back onto that person again. Are such people's skin changing from sticky to non-sticky to sticky again within a matter of seconds?? I have a hard time believing that to be the case.

The holy link that you are allowing to do most of your reasoning for you asserts that a person should be able to lean over if there actually is some magnetic attraction. In the videos that I watched, people were indeed holding their arms in a manner that the magnet should've just fell to the floor. IOW, gravity was being overcome in the videos that I have watched.

I wonder how easily led you are.
Not very easily... I'm not the one who rushed to double mask, buy shopping carts full of toilet paper, wear latex gloves, wrap plastic around surfaces, wear a mask while alone in my car, socially distance, avoid interpersonal contact with my relatives and friends, nor did I rush to get an EUA experimental mRNA jab that is causing more deaths than COVID has caused.

If anyone is "easily led", that would be YOU.

Did you spend a millisecond thinking about it?
Yes, I did. See my above reasoning. Did YOU?

The amount of magnetism in a shot would be indetectable. It would react with your body too. Are you stupid enough to think the cell-sized "metal; reproduces itself? There has to be some way you deluded yourself into such an ignorant belief.
I've never made any such assertion. I've only made note that people who could not perform this phenomenon before receiving the COVID jab can now all of a sudden perform it AFTER receiving the COVID jab... I'm simply asking "why is this"?

Is this just some sort of misleading "trick"?
Is this legit magnetism?
Is this happening to every COVID jab recipient or just a particular number of them?
Does this have a direct tie to any particular COVID jab manufacturer(s)?
How long does this phenomenon occur for? (is it permanent or does it go away after a while)
Can this phenomenon be repeatedly replicated?

and on and on and on... There are many questions that, in my opinion, should be asked about this and then subsequently investigated...
 
I've seen many different videos of this from many different sources... Most instances of this seems to be localized at the injection site, but I've even seen some instances where other areas of a person's body have become magnetic.

Why would receiving a covid jab result in a person being able to take a magnet and have it suction onto themselves (typically at the injection site)? I've received a flu shot twice and I've never had such a thing happen to me...

I would think that this sort of thing would be a huge deal... "breaking news" worthy... yet, this phenomenon hasn't been discussed in the main stream as of yet... Is this a trick of some sort (thus it is nothing to be concerned about)?? Is there something in these jabs that we aren't being told about??

Your thoughts?

 
:laugh: oh, lord, this is SNL worthy

“No. Receiving a COVID-19 vaccine will not make you magnetic, including at the site of vaccination which is usually your arm,” because they are all free of “metals such as iron, nickel, cobalt, lithium, and rare earth alloys, as well as any manufactured products such as microelectronics, electrodes, carbon nanotubes, and nanowire semiconductors” that can create an electromagnetic field, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in an update last week.
“In addition, the typical dose for a COVID-19 vaccine is less than a milliliter,” the agency said, “which is not enough to allow magnets to be attracted to your vaccination site even if the vaccine was filled with a magnetic metal.”
Doctors on social media speculate that magnets people seem to be successfully sticking to their vaccinated arms are only lingering because there’s tape attached behind them or they are secured with some water or spit — tactics invisible to those who watch the videos.”
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.miamiherald.com/news/coronavirus/article251955083.html

Trumpers sure are gull-a-bull. :eek:

I read things like that and consider it a sanity/intelligence test.
 
I've seen many different videos of this from many different sources...
There are few, mostly from TikToc. Some have made it to YouTube for a short while.
Most instances of this seems to be localized at the injection site, but I've even seen some instances where other areas of a person's body have become magnetic.
So the claim goes.
Why would receiving a covid jab result in a person being able to take a magnet and have it suction onto themselves (typically at the injection site)? I've received a flu shot twice and I've never had such a thing happen to me...
You won't with a any of the covid19 shots either.
I would think that this sort of thing would be a huge deal... "breaking news" worthy... yet, this phenomenon hasn't been discussed in the main stream as of yet... Is this a trick of some sort (thus it is nothing to be concerned about)??
It's a parlor trick. The 'magnet' used is tiny, very lightweight. It is held in place either by a weak contact cement, or simply by the the sweat on the arm. You will notice that in these videos, the 'magnet' is carefully moved to the camera to prevent the location it's stuck to from becoming inverted. These claims also go on to mention that the cause is the so-called microchip inserted when you are vaccinated.

We simply aren't made of magnetic stuff. Neither is the vaccine. Microchips themselves aren't magnetic either. The case packaging they are put in often are, but these won't flow through a hypodermic needle.

Chips without power cannot do anything. A power source is too big to flow through a needle as well.

It is a trick. It is nothing to be concerned about.
Is there something in these jabs that we aren't being told about??
Plenty, but magnetism is not one of them.
Your thoughts?
Just given. If the vaccine was permeable in any way (capable of being magnetized), a magnet would cause the skin to visibly rise if held above the skin. It doesn't. Sticking tiny magnets to the skin is easy. Just use a very small magnet (such as shown in the videos) and get 'em wet, and wet the skin where you want to apply it. Giving it a shot of repositional adhesive (such as the spray glue you can get which is the same stuff used on transparent tape) makes it easier.

In other words, Don't Panic.
 
GFM should take this as a lesson. For him to believe such an idiotic thing and keep defending it tells so much about his ability to think things through. This is laughable. I feel sad for him.
 
There are few, mostly from TikToc. Some have made it to YouTube for a short while.

So the claim goes.

You won't with a any of the covid19 shots either.

It's a parlor trick. The 'magnet' used is tiny, very lightweight. It is held in place either by a weak contact cement, or simply by the the sweat on the arm. You will notice that in these videos, the 'magnet' is carefully moved to the camera to prevent the location it's stuck to from becoming inverted. These claims also go on to mention that the cause is the so-called microchip inserted when you are vaccinated.

We simply aren't made of magnetic stuff. Neither is the vaccine. Microchips themselves aren't magnetic either. The case packaging they are put in often are, but these won't flow through a hypodermic needle.

Chips without power cannot do anything. A power source is too big to flow through a needle as well.

It is a trick. It is nothing to be concerned about.

Plenty, but magnetism is not one of them.

Just given. If the vaccine was permeable in any way (capable of being magnetized), a magnet would cause the skin to visibly rise if held above the skin. It doesn't. Sticking tiny magnets to the skin is easy. Just use a very small magnet (such as shown in the videos) and get 'em wet, and wet the skin where you want to apply it. Giving it a shot of repositional adhesive (such as the spray glue you can get which is the same stuff used on transparent tape) makes it easier.

In other words, Don't Panic.
Thank you for your thoughts and explanations. This is the type of response that I was looking for when making this thread.

And given that the numerous viewpoints that have been expressed in this thread so far are very strongly concluding with "parlor trick", I will eventually dig through some of the videos again and re-evaluate them to make sure that I am correctly recalling what I saw while keeping a better eye out for specifics which should be occurring if some sort of magnetism was legitimately happening.
 
Even if the entire dose of vaccine was magnetic material, a magnet would not stick on the injection site. Anyone who believes that the site is magnetized is a fucking moron.

Oh, sorry.....
 
Even if the entire dose of vaccine was magnetic material, a magnet would not stick on the injection site.
I wouldn't know.

Anyone who believes that the site is magnetized is a fucking moron.
Thank you for your viewpoint.

The most plausible explanation would be that it's just a "parlor trick" that became popular on some social media site, as I am familiar that sweat/oil/grease/etc (that makes skin sticky) can easily allow for such things to occur, but it's still worth at least digging deeper into and making sure that there isn't something weird and sinister going on with regard to it.

I hold a huge distrust regarding anything about COVID (due to the lying and manipulation from government and media sources) and the COVID jabs (due to the persistent "dangling carrot" coercion and manipulation efforts to get "everyone" to take the jabs for sake of "convenience" or "freedom" that one ought to have regardless)... Thus, I will most definitely start off being overly skeptical of such matters until I gain more information/knowledge/understanding/etc.

Oh, sorry.....
You have no need to be sorry for expressing your views. I welcome them! :)
 
GFM should take this as a lesson. For him to believe such an idiotic thing and keep defending it tells so much about his ability to think things through. This is laughable. I feel sad for him.

Remarkably stupid poster with multiple socks. The worst kind of troll.
 
I wouldn't know.


Thank you for your viewpoint.

The most plausible explanation would be that it's just a "parlor trick" that became popular on some social media site, as I am familiar that sweat/oil/grease/etc (that makes skin sticky) can easily allow for such things to occur, but it's still worth at least digging deeper into and making sure that there isn't something weird and sinister going on with regard to it.

I hold a huge distrust regarding anything about COVID (due to the lying and manipulation from government and media sources) and the COVID jabs (due to the persistent "dangling carrot" coercion and manipulation efforts to get "everyone" to take the jabs for sake of "convenience" or "freedom" that one ought to have regardless)... Thus, I will most definitely start off being overly skeptical of such matters until I gain more information/knowledge/understanding/etc.


You have no need to be sorry for expressing your views. I welcome them! :)

It has already been dug many times long time ago and found to be false.

Realize your mistake and move on. You are making an ass out of yourself.
 
actually, my son and his tenant tried it out the day he got his shot......the magnet stuck to the tenant's arm.....

tenor.gif
 
GFM should take this as a lesson.
What lesson should I be learning? I think it's good to question these sort of things and to dig deeper into them.

I guess one thing I could work on is to not jump so quickly into "opposition mode" with moron leftists, as I did in post #16, where I bastardized what I actually said earlier on in the thread.

After reviewing that post, I retract my position of "people are somehow becoming magnetic" that I expressed in that post.

For him to believe such an idiotic thing
I am not taking a "magnetism is definitely happening" stance (besides post #16, of which I am hereby retracting)...

My OP simply noted some observations, asked some questions, and concluded by asking other posters for their thoughts as to whether this phenomenon is just a "parlor trick" (nothing to be concerned about) or whether there is something in these jabs that we aren't being told about (which could still be the case outside of this magnetism topic)...

and keep defending it
I am not "defending it" since I am not taking that stance. My intent was to bring light to observations, dig deeper into them, ask questions, and get people's thoughts on it.

tells so much about his ability to think things through.
I'm actually asking questions and asking for input that I can at a later time dig deeper into for myself.

This is laughable. I feel sad for him.
I feel sad for you.
 
Are you being serious or sarcastic?

If serious, do you have any more details about it?

I'm being serious......they read about it on the internet, he was going in for his shot......they had one of those wafer magnets people use to post a paper on a refrigerator......it stuck.....
 
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