WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

784

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

Using magnetic fields to concentrate particles into target cells is what this article is describing. That could explain the effect. I do not know what is causing it, or if it is indeed real as I am not in the presence of people experimenting on themselves. However, as I stated in my other response to you, there is a lot of tech that we are immersed in, and the things they admit to are decades behind what they are currently capable of. This article makes it clear that they are using magnetic tech in ways that the general population isn't aware of. You are immediately dismissive of the idea that this is possible. My stance is it is possible. Your stance is because it doesn't fit in the box of what you know, it's not, and beyond that you have no point to make.

You have a lot of insults and nothing to stand on besides that, just as you did in your last post. You might as well be a bot.

[–] 0 pt

However, as I stated in my other response to you, there is a lot of tech that we are immersed in, and the things they admit to are decades behind what they are currently capable of. This article makes it clear that they are using magnetic tech in ways that the general population isn't aware of. You are immediately dismissive of the idea that this is possible. My stance is it is possible.

The old worn out trope that "they have tech beyond our knowledge" as a reason why I should believe your bullshit theory. You might as well conjure up some "black magic" as an explanation for such claims as they fit the same way here. Without proof or at least something that can be experimentally confirmed, this is all just bullshit. And don't conflate "possible" with "probable".

Tattoos use ferromagnetic particles in the ink (such as black ink). Even under the seriously strong magnetic field of an MRI machine, there is no magnetic attraction from the ink particles or the iron in our blood (heme iron). Surely someone who has recently had a jewflu vaxx has also undergone an MRI scan shortly after. If the vaxx was magnetic enough to stick a rare earth magnet to the skin as those videos are showing (which you believe are proof), then the MRI machine would rip a chunk of their flesh out from the attraction. MRI machines will turn ferromagnetic objects into hyper-projectiles if they are in the same room when the magnets are doing their thing. If it can suck in a keyring or screwdriver, then surely the magnetic vaxx particles would pool to the surface of the skin. Find me a video of an MRI doing this to a vaxxed person and maybe I will be less skeptical.

You might as well be a bot.

That means nothing coming from a mindless sheep like you.