Here's a list I found that says which metals are soluble and which are insoluble. Instead of only listing the ones that are soluble, to be fair and accurate, I'll include both soluble and insoluble metals.
Aluminum and compounds Aluminum metal reacts with dilute hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, potassium hydroxide, and sodium hydroxide. The salts of aluminum, including sodium aluminate, aluminum fluoride, aluminum chloride, and cryolite, are all soluble in water.
Arsenic and compounds Arsenic — Insoluble in hot and cold water; soluble in nitric acid. Arsenic trioxide and pentoxide — Soluble in cold and hot water, alcohol, alkalies, and hydrochloric acid; arsenic pentoxide is soluble in acids. Lead arsenate — Insoluble in cold water; soluble in hot water, nitric acid, and caustic alkalies. Calcium arsenate(s) — Insoluble in water and acids. Sodium arsenate(s) — Very soluble in water. Arsenic acid — Soluble in water and alcohol. Arsenic trisulfide — Practically insoluble in water.
Barium and compounds Barium metal — Insoluble in water; soluble in alcohol. Most of the compounds of barium are soluble in (cold or hot) water, for example, barium chloride, barium oxide, barium acetate, and barium cyanide. Barium hydroxide is slightly soluble in water. Barium carbonate is insoluble to slightly soluble in water, and is soluble in acids.
Beryllium and compounds Beryllium — Slightly soluble in hot water; insoluble in cold water; soluble in dilute alkalies and acids. Beryllium oxide — Insoluble in water; soluble in some acids and alkalies. Beryllium hydroxide — Insoluble in water; soluble in acids and alkalies. Beryllium fluoride — Soluble in cold and hot water, alcohol, and sulfuric acid. Beryllium sulfate — Soluble in water and concentrated sulfuric acid.
Chromium and compounds Chromium reacts with dilute hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid, but not with nitric acid. Chromium metal — Insoluble in hot and cold water. Hexavalent chromium compounds, including chromium trioxide, the anhydride of chromic acid, chromates, dichromates, and polychromates, tend to be of low solubility in water and can be subdivided into two subgroups: 1.) Water-soluble hexavalent chromium compounds include chromic acid, its anhydride, and the monochromates and dichromates of sodium, potassium, ammonium, lithium, cesium, and rubidium. 2.) Water-insoluble hexavalent chromium compounds include zinc chromate, lead chromate, barium chromate, and sintered chromium trioxide. NOTE: Depending on the reference [CRC 2015, O’Neil 2006] both calcium chromate and strontium chromate are listed as soluble and insoluble in water.
Iron and compounds Iron, ferrous oxide, ferric oxide, and iron oxide — Insoluble in hot and cold water. Ferric chloride, ferric nitrate, ferric sulfate, ferrous sulfate and ferrous chloride — Soluble in hot and cold water. Ferric chloride — Soluble in ethanol, methanol, and ether. Ferric nitrate and ferrous chloride — Soluble in ethanol and acetone. Ferric sulfate — Sparingly soluble in ethanol; insoluble in acetone. Ferrous sulfate — Insoluble in ethanol.
Molybdenum and compounds Molybdenum — Insoluble in hot or cold water; soluble in nitric, sulfuric, and hydrochloric acids. Molybdic oxide — Sparingly soluble in water; soluble in acids and alkalies. Molybdenum disulfide — Insoluble in hot or cold water and dilute acids; soluble in hot sulfuric acid, aqua regia, and nitric acid. Ammonium molybdate — Soluble in hot or cold water, acids, and alkalies. Calcium molybdate — Insoluble in cold water; soluble in hot water. Lead molybdate — Insoluble in water and alcohol; soluble in acid and potassium hydroxide. Sodium molybdate — Soluble in hot and cold water.
Nickel and compounds Nickel — Insoluble in hot and cold water; soluble in nitric, sulfuric, and hydrochloric acids. Nickel oxide — Insoluble in hot and cold water; soluble in ammonium hydroxide and acids. Nickel acetate — Soluble in cold water; insoluble in alcohol [CRC 2015]; soluble in alcohol [O’Neil 2006]. Nickel carbonate — Soluble in cold water; insoluble in hot water. NIOSH Manual of Analytical Methods 5th Edition Chapter SM April 2016 Page SM-16 of SM-17 Sampling and Analysis of Soluble Metal Compounds Nickel hydrates — Some forms soluble, others insoluble (in water). Nickel sulfate — Soluble in hot and cold water.
Platinum and compounds Platinum — Insoluble in hot or cold water and single mineral acids; soluble in aqua regia; attacked by halogens, alkali cyanides, and caustic alkalies. Platinum forms are series of complex chloroplatinate salts that are water soluble.
Rhodium and compounds Rhodium — Insoluble in hot or cold water; soluble in hot sulfuric acid plus hydrochloric acid; slightly soluble in acids and aqua regia. Water-soluble rhodium compounds include rhodium trichloride, sodium chlororhodite, and rhodium carbonyl acetylacetonate.
Silver and compounds Silver — Insoluble in water and inert to most acids; reacts readily in dilute nitric acid or hot concentrated sulfuric acid; soluble in fused alkali hydroxides in the presence of air. Silver oxide — Soluble in hot and cold water, acids, and alkalies. Silver acetate — Soluble in hot or cold water and nitric acid. Silver bromide — Insoluble in hot or cold water and nitric acid. Silver chloride — Soluble in hot water; slightly soluble in cold water and ammonium hydroxide. Silver cyanide — Soluble in cold water, nitric acid, and ammonium hydroxide. Silver nitrate — Soluble in hot and cold water.
Thallium and compounds Thallium — Insoluble in hot and cold water; soluble in nitric, sulfuric, and hydrochloric acids. Thallous oxide — Soluble in water, acids, and alcohols. Thallic oxide — Insoluble in hot or cold water; soluble in acids. Thallous acetate and thallic chloride — Soluble in cold water and alcohol. Thallous bromide and chloride — Slightly soluble in water. Thallous sulfate — Soluble in hot or cold water. Thallous sulfide — Soluble in cold water.
Tungsten and compounds Tungsten — Insoluble in hot or cold water, hydrofluoric acid, and potassium hydroxide; soluble in mixtures of hydrofluoric and nitric acid; slightly soluble in sulfuric acid. Tungsten trioxide — Insoluble in hot or cold water and acids; soluble in hot alkalies and hydrofluoric acid. Tungstic acid — Insoluble in cold water and most acids; soluble in hot water, alkalies, hydrofluoric acid, and ammonia. Sodium tungstate — Soluble in hot and cold water; slightly soluble in ammonia; insoluble in acids and alcohol. Tungsten carbide — Insoluble in water; soluble in mixtures of hydrofluoric and nitric acid, and in aqua regia. Tungsten diboride — Insoluble in hot or cold water; soluble in aqua regia. Tungsten hexachloride — Soluble in hot water. Tungsten oxytetrachloride — Soluble in hot or cold water. Tungsten hexafluoride — Soluble in hot or cold water and alkalies. Tungsten disulfide — Insoluble in cold water and in alcohol; soluble in mixtures of hydrofluoric and nitric acid. Phosphotungstic acid — Soluble in cold water, alcohol, and ether. Ammonium paratungstate — Soluble in water; insoluble in alcohol.
Uranium and compounds Uranium — Insoluble in hot or cold water, alcohol, and alkali. Uranium dioxide — Insoluble in hot or cold water; soluble in nitric acid and concentrated sulfuric acid. Triuranium octoxide — Insoluble in hot or cold water; soluble in nitric acid and sulfuric acid. Uranium tetrafluoride — Insoluble in cold water, dilute acids, and alkalies; soluble in concentrated acids and alkalies.
a list I found that says which metals are soluble
nice list, however the question to be answered is: "tiny particles do not exhibit a magnetic permeability high enough to do what the video shows"
> the question to be answered is: "tiny particles do not exhibit
You're not asking a question, you're pushing an agenda. Instead of asking, "Do soluble metals exhibit" You're trying to push the answer.
If you were asking a question, the answer would be -
There definitely is a possibility.
But what also needs to be answered is what happens after those soluble metals are injected into human flesh. Specifically, what does human flesh do to the soluble material, how will the metals act after having the soluble material absorbed by the flesh, and what states are the material and metal in prior to, and after, the injection. - For example the Pfizer injections need to be stored at -80 degrees Celsius.
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
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