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

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.

I also saw this giant lizard attacking Tokyo... And that video was much more believable.
 
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.
I realized a mistake that I made in an earlier post and have admitted it and retracted it. I could also be incorrectly recalling what I saw, and would have to give it a more thorough investigation (of which I don't have time to do atm because I am currently devoting my free time towards pursuing a job opportunity that has presented itself to me).

Inquiring, investigating, and asking questions (and for input) is not "making an ass out of myself".
 
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?

Biden did it
 
Twitter has banned the account of Dr Sherri Tenpenny, a prominent conspiracy theorist who falsely testified recently that the COVID-19 vaccine makes people magnetic.

Tenpenny, an osteopath, is a leading voice in the anti-vaxx movement and author of "Saying No to Vaccines." In early June she falsely claimed at an Ohio statehouse hearing that the COVID-19 vaccine was making people "magnetized."

She also falsely said the vaccine contains particles that can connect to 5G wireless technology. :laugh:


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/tw...ocid=Peregrine
 
I'm not asking you to take my word for it, nor am I asking you to accept the conclusions that I have drawn from such videos... You can search out these videos for yourself and come to your own conclusions about them.

I'm just asking people what their thoughts are about it.



It’s fucking lies designed to destroy America

And you love Putin over America and science
 
I realized a mistake that I made in an earlier post and have admitted it and retracted it. I could also be incorrectly recalling what I saw, and would have to give it a more thorough investigation (of which I don't have time to do atm because I am currently devoting my free time towards pursuing a job opportunity that has presented itself to me).

Inquiring, investigating, and asking questions (and for input) is not "making an ass out of myself".

Goes to tell you that you should not believe what you see in Youtube videos.
 
The videos are not fake; they are genuine.

They very well could be, however, manipulative or otherwise misleading (iow, a "parlor trick" is being performed). Is this what you think is happening?

The guy that made the video said it was a joke.

Anybody who thinks people are getting magnetic chips with their vaccination is delusional.
 
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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.....
Ahhhhh, got it. Thanks. This does, however, get back to several questions that would need to be asked and answered in order to get to the bottom of what's going on in that case.
 
Goes to tell you that you should not believe what you see in Youtube videos.
No, it just means that one should be skeptical of what one sees (and not immediately jump to definite conclusions).

There are many YouTube videos that are quite accurate... Of course, there are many others that are very inaccurate.
 
No, it just means that one should be skeptical of what one sees (and not immediately jump to definite conclusions).

There are many YouTube videos that are quite accurate... Of course, there are many others that are very inaccurate.

If the claim is true, it would have been all over the news. That's one of hints.
 
If the claim is true, it would have been all over the news. That's one of hints.
Another bad assumption. There are many true claims that the news purposely suppresses because it either exposes them for the lying manipulators that they are or else it harms the Demonkkkrat Party of which they are a "thought control" extension of.
 
Another bad assumption. There are many true claims that the news purposely suppresses because it either exposes them for the lying manipulators that they are or else it harms the Demonkkkrat Party of which they are a "thought control" extension of.

You forget about Fox News and others.
 
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