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COVID-19 VACCINES: The vaccines may cause "magnetic reactions": Fact or Conspiracy theory?

Author: S. Gordon-Jeffery




It was only recently that I was chatting with a friend and he told me about these strange videos being shared across social media, of persons who took the Pfizer shot now able to attract magnets to their arm the arm they got the Pfizer shot in. 

Indeed, that was a shock to me and I found it hard to believe. "No sah! Nutt'n cyaa guh suh!" I said to myself, even as I listened. 


After he left I felt I needed to see those videos for myself, so I contacted him and asked him to send them to me. 

Well ... I saw what I saw, and even now I am in shock! I decided to share the video here, which is a compilation of small videos of people demonstrating that magnets could now stick to their arm after getting their first or second and complete Pfizer shot.

Media denial 

Now I don't claim to know everything. I am not a scientist, although I do have a very bright scientist in the family, but I figured it was worth doing some reading to check out what the news media are saying about this strange 'magnetising' side effect.

According to USA TODAY, the claims of people becoming magnetic after their Pfizer shot are not true and are made up by conspiracy theorists.

Conspiracy Theories! Conspiracies!

There are two (2) theories out there about microchipping vaccines:

The first theory: 

Persons called anti-vaxxers, claim Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft, is somehow behind a secret, nefarious plot to chip and track billions of people across the world using the COVID-19 vaccines.

 It is also believed that he and other power-brokers are behind a global scheme of control concerning the vaccines and the novel coronavirus itself.

The news network, USA TODAY, however says that they have done their own checks and can confirm that the whole thing is a hoax, noting also that Mr Gates "repeatedly denied the claim" and other "independent fact-checking organizations" have found no evidence to substantiate these persons assertions. [1]

The second theory: 

Persons were to be implanted via syringes that contain RFID chips. The claim was a spin-off from news that ApiJect Systems, a medical equipments manufacturer, was to create supplies of highly sophisticated pre-filled syringes with RFID-tracking capabilities for the US government. These syringes would be used to track the number of vaccine shots administered across the country.

The Connecticut-based company was awarded $1.3 billion in May 2020 to make these single-use syringes but according to NBC News the technology is still in "testing and regulatory reviews". [2]

Magnetism

USA TODAY did note an Instagram post published on May 10 (2021), on an account called Keep_Canada_Free. It was a video showing a masked woman placing a small silver magnet on her arm the arm where she received the Pfizer shot.  Surprisingly, the magnet stuck to her arm.  When she however tried it on the unvaccinated arm, it fell off. 

So by now you're like, "Wait, I wanna see that for myself!"

Not to worry, it so happens that she also appears in the 4:43 minute compilation video I will be sharing in this post. She says to her viewers, "You go figure it out. We're chipped" with an emphatic, "We're f*cked!", afterwards. So look out for her.

Here's what USA TODAY further says about her video:

"The 25-second video has had over 20,000 views on Instagram and has been shared on social media platforms such as Twitter, where a resized version posted on May 8 also includes the claim the vaccine has "magnetic reactions." (Fact check: COVID-19 vaccines don't cause magnetic reactions or contain tracking devices)

So you wanna see the video?

Look below. 

👇👇👇👇👇💉



Did you watch it? What do you think? Is it real? 

My opinion? 

I think it is. 

As you saw, the video showed persons from different countries. I picked up a British accent from a few of the persons and maybe American or Canadian or both. These persons don't know each other. The one very significant thing they have in common however, is the Pfizer-Biontech vaccine. Think about it. These are random folks posting about their common experience after taking the Pfizer magnets stick to their arm, the arm they received the shot in.

So now you may be wondering: "How could this be possible?"

Media pundits and scientists don't have an answer for this because for one thing, no research has been done into what's happening to these people, and of course they all deny that this is even happening. It's not real. It must be a camera trick! 

Well, I did some digging into the ingredients that make the Pfizer vaccine.

Besides the now famously known mRNa molecules from the novel coronavirus, the vaccine contains another ingredient of interest -- lipids aka nanoparticles.

What are lipids?

According to MIT TECHNOLOGY REVIEW (yes man, MIT! The Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the big guns in scientific research) lipids are "tiny, greasy spheres that protect the mRNA and help it to slide inside cells (What are the ingredients in Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine?). Apparently, the lipids are greasy because they are made with an oily substance that prevents them from breaking down before they enter the body, and therefore, they protect the highly fragile mRNA cells from degenerating before they complete their task.

There was one thing they said that I found quite interesting. The MIT Technology Review said that these nanoparticles have an electric charge! The main type out of the four components they use, ALC-0315 is ionizable, and can be manipulated to have a positive electric charge. MIT revealed this was useful because the coronavirus has a negative charge, therefore opposites attract and would cause both molecules to "stick together". [3]

Humans and electricity

Did you know our own bodies use electricity? No? I did not know either, until recently. This is what the University of Maryland had to say:

"Our cells are specialized to conduct electrical currents. Electricity is required for the nervous system to send signals throughout the body and to the brain, making it possible for us to move, think and feel ...The elements in our bodies, like sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium, have a specific electrical charge. Almost all of our cells can use these charged elements, called ions, to generate electricity."

So hear me out now. Just walk with me in your thoughts. The university noted that inside our cells are negatively charged when in a rested state, but can become positive because of an outside force. Lawks, mi a duh Physics!

Essentially, our cells' membranes (protective barriers) open up like a gateway when stimulated by positively charged elements. Okay? Okay. Here, look at this:

"... cell membrane is made up of lipids that create a barrier that only certain substances can cross to reach the cell interior ...When a cell is stimulated, it allows positive charges to enter the cell through open ion channels. The inside of the cell then becomes more positively charged ..." [4]

Let's use our skills of deduction, shall we. So, the scientists use the positively charged lipid nanoparticles to help the vaccine easily slip through the cells, providing an avenue for the negatively charged mRNA molecules to reproduce in the body, and create antibodies that should provide protection against COVID-19. The thing is, the Pfizer scientists say the mRNA molecules, the nanoparticles, and all the other ingredients of the vaccine, (which includes sugar) will eventually dissolve and pass harmlessly through our bodies. 

But ...

What if that is not what actually happens? What if some elements of the vaccine are harder to break down and remain or become assimilated into the human cells?

We know from our grade 9 Physics class that opposite electric charges attract each other. A positive particle attracts a negative particle, vice versa; they are pulled together by an undeniable force, just like the lipids do to the mRNA.

And like magnet to steel!

 Some lipid nanoparticle elements are made from metals. ALC-0315 is said to be made from an oily substance. [5] It however does not mean that other ingredients used to make the lipids are not metallic in nature. [6] In the human body, the cells' activities produce biologal/chemical reactions that create an electric field that scientists can measure for different purposes. For example, an electrocardiogram is used to measure the electrical impulses of the human heart. [7] 

Could it be possible that the vaccine's contents can mess up our cells' natural flow of positive and negative electrical energy? It could be. We don't know. Maybe the drugmakers don't know either.

Just to be clear —there were no such similar weird side effects reported by persons who took the AstraZeneca or Johnson & Johnson vaccines, which use an adenovirus to act as the carrier for fragments of the COVID-19 cells. You should also be aware of the absence of similar 'magnetic reactions' reported against the Moderna vaccine, which also uses mRNA technology like Pfizer does. Also, the side effect, as far as I am aware, is still a rare reaction to the vaccine. While the evidence is not overwhelming, even one or a few cases should still be looked into, which is what I chose to do today.

Conclusion

Remember, these are experimental drugs, not yet approved by the FDA or any other medical authority. They have only been given 'emergency use authorization', which is different from true approval. If something were to happen to you, you will not be compensated by the pharmaceutical company, and who knows what your government can do to help you.

I haven't written this article as a tirade against the COVID-19 vaccines. No. I wrote this article because for some unexplainable reason scientists, the media and the political authorities have all pushed these persons' concerns aside, acting as though they are not real or they are fanatics. If it is indeed true that they went in and took the vaccine, they cannot be vilified as anti-vaxxers. If a person is against taking vaccines and speaks against taking them, would they then go in and allow someone to shoot an 'emergency-use authorized' vaccine that was only developed in eight (8) months into their arm? No, they wouldn't. 

I would never claim to know the truth of this whole thing. And, I am not against any vaccine. All I am doing is using this article to give the persons in the video an avenue to speak their truth, since most people don't know or like the experts have dismissed them, think they are crazy or pulling a hoax. Here I lay out, as much as possible, information I think, you my reader should know. Please weigh all that was written and shown here, and then you make up your own mind about the truth. Thank you for your time.



__________________

References

  1. Fauzia, Miriam. 'Fact check: COVID-19 vaccines don't cause magnetic reactions or contain tracking devices'. USA TODAY. Published 12 May 2021. https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/factcheck/2021/05/12/fact-check-covid-19-vaccines-dont-contain-tracking-devices/5037132001/
  2. Lehren, Andrew and Laura Strickler. 'The Trump admin awarded a firm up to $1.3 billion to make Covid vaccine syringes. Where are they? The Covid vaccines are here, but the ApiJect syringe is not yet approved by federal regulators'. NBC NEWS. Published 21 April 2021. https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-care/trump-administration-awarded-firm-1-3-billion-make-covid-vaccine-n1263872
  3. Regalado, Antonio. 'What are the ingredients in Pfizer's Covid-19 vaccine?' MIT Technology Review. Published December 9, 2020. https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/12/09/1013538/what-areW. -the-ingredients-of-pfizers-covid-19-vaccine/
  4. Plants, Amber. 'How the human body uses electricity'. University of Maryland Graduate School. Published February 2016. https://www.graduate.umaryland.edu/gsa/gazette/February-2016/How-the-human-body-uses-electricity/
  5. Wikipedia. 'ALC-0315'. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/ALC-0315
  6. Wikipedia. 'Nanoparticle'. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nanoparticle/
  7. World Health Organization. 'What happens when you are exposed to electromagnetic fields?' Radiation: Electric Magnetic fields. Published 4 August 2016. https://www.who.int/news-room/q-a-detail/radiation-electromagnetic-fields

Updated 3 June 2021.




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