You're not asking a question, you're pushing an agenda.
no, other than I want flat earthers to fuck off and stop making us look bad.
Instead of asking, "Do soluble metals exhibit"
We already know this, blood is already full of iron and this effect is not exhibited.
There definitely is a possibility
no there isn't, because nothing transparent and small enough to be injected via a needle has enough magnetic permeability to allow a fridge magnet to stick to your arm.
These are physical laws and they are very easily checked. Watching a tictok video is not a reliable source of information, it is entertainment for niggers.
what also needs to be answered is what happens after those soluble metals are injected into human flesh
No we don't, because a Covid vaccine doesn't use a superparamagnetic delivery mechanism. Ever eaten spinach? Congrats, you now have extra iron in your blood, whatever the body doesn't need is expelled, it doesn't sit around making just your arms magnetic either
Pfizer injections need to be stored at -80 degrees Celsius.
so what? enzymes break down mRNA, the same as bacteria breaks down food. Both require freezing to remain stable
>other than I want flat earthers to fuck off
See, you've just proved my point.
You're pushing an agenda. You ignore proof and scientific facts if that don't align with your agenda.
Someone disagrees, and the only option you have is to attack the messenger. "They're flat Earthers. They're conspiracy theorists who get their evidence from TikTok videos."
After explaining to you that metals are soluble, I could explain that metals are made up of atoms, Barium is made of Barium atoms for example. You can't see individual Chromium atoms. Etc, etc. But this is pointless. You are beyond saving. If what I say doesn't align with your agenda, your brain isn't capable of dealing with the contradiction.
Also, you aren't capable of abstract thought. Many of the lesser races aren't.
Are the magnets sticking to one arm and not the other because they had alcohol rubbed on that spot a few days earlier and now their skin is slightly sticky in that spot? Maybe. It is possible. - But if that doesn't align with someone's agenda they'd point out that rubbing alcohol isn't sticky. But abstract thought would give the possibility that the oils and sweat secreted in a spot that was covered in alcohol could make the skin sticky.
Or is it because a soluble metal was injected in that spot? Definitely possible. - Oh... but that doesn't align with your agenda. And you aren't capable of abstract thought. So you'll say bullshit like metal isn't soluble and that you'd be able to spot the metal atoms.
See, you've just proved my point. You're pushing an agenda.
no, you are just looking for people who you imagine have an agenda, just so you can push back against something. That's tribalism at work.
You ignore proof and scientific facts
You haven't provided any?
Someone disagrees, and the only option you have is to attack the messenger
Flat earthers and anyone who watches TikTok videos need attacking. The very fact that they are clearly tolerated in here pisses me off. And that's not the only option I'm providing here, I'm dismissing your suggestion because it lacks any real basis
After explaining to you that metals are soluble, I could explain...
Go on then, explain how 0.3ml (that's about half a tic-tac in volume) of any injected transparent liquid with whatever metal atoms in suspension, could make a magnet stick to an arm the following day. For bonus points, explain how nobody else in here can verify this amazing phenomena...
you've watched some dumb e-thots on tiktok doing stupid stuff for social media fame, you've got no theory why an injection site might be magnetic or why this effect hasn't migrated around in the bloodstream, you've got no theory why anyone would even bother other that the usual generic deep state paranoia that now infects the Right, you've got nobody verifying what was put online as true, you've got nothing other that a desperation to find something "wrong" with vaccines because actually that's your real agenda here. There's a twonk in some other thread trying to link it with 5G and nanobots or something, it's all fucking ridiculous
I've even linked to a picture of some dude with spoons sticking to his head, yet here you are thinking it's something new. Get a grip.
I never said to you that the magnets were sticking to them because of the injections. What I've been saying is that you YOU have absolutely no argument at all. YOU have no evidence. That YOU are only pushing an agenda. And I've been pointing out how YOU ARE WRONG. But at no time have I said that others were right. Only that YOU ARE WRONG.
I've been pointing out that what YOU have been saying has no basis in reality. That YOUR argument is flawed. And when YOU are proven wrong, YOU double down instead of accepting reality.
Does the fact that YOU ARE WRONG make others right? NO. It does not. It just means that YOU ARE WRONG.
Whether others are right or wrong is irrelevant. YOU ARE WRONG.
>Go on then, explain how 0.3ml (that's about half a tic-tac in volume) of any injected transparent liquid with whatever metal atoms in suspension, could make a magnet stick to an arm the following day. For bonus points, explain how nobody else in here can verify this amazing phenomena...
Look at the agenda you're pushing. The injection is 2.25ml. They claim that there is only 0.3 or 0.5ml of "vaccine" in the injection, depending on the brand. But the injection is 2.25ml. So right there, you're wrong. You said 0.3ml because that half truth supports your agenda. (Half truths are lying by omission.)
Can there be enough soluble metal in a 2.25ml injection to cause a magnet to stick to someone? 100% YES. There can be more than enough.
Does that mean the magnets are sticking to those people because there's metal in their flesh? It's definitely possible. It's also likely. But, it's also possible that there skin is sticky in that spot because they had alcohol rubbed on it the day before.
But the fact still remains - It is possible, and even likely, that they had soluble metals injected into them.
>For bonus points, explain how nobody else in here can verify this amazing phenomena...
Metals are soluble. I proved that to you with my first comment. Barium (as one example from the list I gave you earlier) is soluble. Barium is what's used to make speaker magnets. It's also used to make magnetic tapes like cassette and VCR tapes. Does that mean that the people in the videos were injected with barium? Or that their cells are having their DNA rewritten like when you record a song on a cassette? NO.
All it means is that YOU ARE WRONG. Metal is soluble. There could be more than enough metal in the injections to cause a magnet to stick to someone.
But now that I think about it, It doesn't have to be soluble metal. A fridge magnet will stick to a cassette or VCR tape. And those tapes are cellophane with a very tiny amount of microscopic powdered metal on them. So the metal doesn't even have to be soluble. It can be in powder form and injected. With there being more than enough in a 2.25ml injection to cause a magnet to stick to the injection spot.
So yeah. Take a fridge magnet and stick it to tiny amount of powdered metal. Stick a fridge magnet to the tape on a VCR cassette. This amazing phenomena will be proven right before your eyes.
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