RE: Dr. Jane Ruby: COVID19 Vaccines DO Contain Magnetic Components | Magnetofection

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I don't know much about the technology, but there are way too many videos of people demonstrating the magnetic attraction with clearly strong movement between the attracted option and the body for this to be all 'mistakes' to me. I don't know what exactly is going on here. At first I thought maybe it was just a few weird people looking for a laugh, but I have seen probably 20 videos by now and sometimes the objects clearly jump from the person's hand onto the part of the body where it gets stuck. I've also seen a guy with a stud finder that kept buzzing when he put it on his injection site. There are different explanations, yes. I remain open.



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The stud finder video is a perfect example of misleading, it doesn't prove at all what the guy says. Electronic stud finders like the one in the video, rely on density variations to find studs. So, in this guy's case, when it buzzes, it's not because it finds something magnetic, only because the density is different, it could be muscle or bone. You can get the exact same type of buzzing on the other arm (not the injected one), or other parts of the body.

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I don't know about the stud finder in the video but plenty of them can detect metal. E.g.
https://www.amazon.com/Stud-Finder-Sensor-Wall-Scanner/dp/B07F6RZM43/ref=asc_df_B07F6RZM43

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Of course, but the main detection is still based on the density variations. The additional features like metal detection are calibrated to detect objects similar to nails, small but still much bigger than what can go through a needle. Anyways, like I said, I will keep my eyes open.

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If the vaccines contains something that is magnetic then it's fair to say that it operates in a new way that most of us don't have experience of. You are right that I don't have enough knowledge of how this all works to really know either way at this point.

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The very fact that the object jumps is a strong indication that it is most likely fake. The force needed to attract the object (particularly simple metallic objects not generating their own field) so strongly through skin and human tissue would require a significant magnetic field, only possible with way more magnetic material that can be contained in the vaccine dose, which is less than a milliliter.

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i don't have the answers, i just know what i saw and don't have an explanation for it. i wish i could find the video. the metallic object was attracted with a similar strength to how i see matal move towards fairly strong magnets, yes.
either it's a weird trick or the person has something metalling in their arm at precisely the injection point or there is something up with the vaccines that we don't understand.

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Like I already mentioned in another post comments a few days ago, I also try and stay open and therefore I started asking all the people that I knew were vaccinated if they were magnetic and I even tested myself for a few of them. And not a single one was magnetic. I was almost disappointed.
Even that nurse testifying in Ohio completely failed her demonstration and could not get a key and a bobby pin to stick to her skin

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I fully accept that this could all be explained eventually without any magnetic component in the vaccines. I will keep my eye out for the longer video I saw recently.

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For sure, I will keep asking vaccinated people. If I can find just one, I'm going to test everything I can on their arm 😉

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