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Topic: Anti-Vax Nurse's Attempt To Prove COVID Vaccines Make People Magnetic Backfires - page 2. (Read 278 times)

legendary
Activity: 1904
Merit: 1277
More than likely, the CDC or Big Pharma paid her to do this to emphasize how good their products are.

Yeah. Either that, or the magnet theory is absolute nonsense.
One or the other...
legendary
Activity: 3906
Merit: 1373
More than likely, the CDC or Big Pharma paid her to do this to emphasize how good their products are. It doesn't work for everyone. But there are plenty of people who it worked for. Search for them.

The reason it works at times is this.
- In some people much of the vaccine stays in the muscle into which it was injected.
- The vaccine is made up of spikes like Covid had.
- In the lungs, Covid cause hemoglobin not to work; suffocation.
- The immune system directed loads of iron to the Covid lung to force the hemoglobin to work.
- In similar ways the immune system directs iron to the injection spot, because oxygen/hemoglobin is deactivated by the spikes.
- More iron means more chance for a magnet to stick.

Reasons why magnets stick now, but not next week, have to do with the circulation of more of the spikes over time, or the body succeeding with oxygen/hemoglobin control in some way.

One size doesn't fit all. Some people have the magnetic effect for months. Others only have it for the first day. Others for times of any duration in between. A few don't seem to get it at all.

Cool
sr. member
Activity: 728
Merit: 266
               Oh my lord! This is freaking hilarious!  Grin Grin How does the brain of this woman even work? lol. How did she even become a nurse in the first place? Wow, several years of time and money investments for a degree gone to waste. This just goes to show how conspiracy theories can affect even the smartest people when influenced by the right person. Just as how flat earthers are. Damn, I cannot even imagine how she can endure such huge humiliation. If it were me, I'd be moving into my parents basement instead and live the rest of my life there without showing my face to anyone anymore.

-Jokes aside though, I really feel bad for people like this.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 4795
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No real prove of the magnetism theory the nurse was trying to prove, the key sharp can possibly stick to human body on the chest where she placed it, placing it on her neck would have been better, and yet she did but the key kept falling off her neck, while the hairpin or so fell off her neck easily as well. This is obvious she is quite wrong and she is not having any authentic prove yet.
legendary
Activity: 2436
Merit: 1104
the magnet technology on the vaccine is clearly still not active that's why the key didn't stick to her. wait until the government turns that switch on and all kind of metal is gonna start sticking to all that got vaccinated.

it's really entertaining what people come up with just to feel or think that they are superior and not a "sheeple". I give her an A for courage.

also, the woman behind her is probably holding back her laugh.


hero member
Activity: 1974
Merit: 534
Oh wow, this is some next level trolling. How can you actually believe something like that and be a nurse? I would be very afraid if such a nurse would treat me. The sad thing is that there will be people who actually believe here. Why is there no sanity check before such people can testify in front of a committee? We shouldn't allow air time on TV for crazy people.
full member
Activity: 1148
Merit: 158
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So this news still makes me laugh for few days now

On Tuesday, an anti-vax Ohio nurse attempted to prove that COVID-19 vaccines make people magnetic, but she failed.



Quote
Registered nurse Joanna Overholt, testifying before the Ohio House health committee about what she said were potential coronavirus vaccine dangers, tried to use her own body as proof.

Overholt said she heard during lunch that vaccines cause magnetism in humans, so she decided to prove her point on herself by attempting to show how a bobby pin and a key would stick to her exposed skin.

Overholt said:

"Explain to me why the key sticks to me. It sticks to my neck, too. So, yeah, if somebody could explain this, that would be great."

The nonmagnetic aluminum key actually fell off her neck as soon as she removed her hand.

For other news reference with video:

Nurse uses key, hairpin to try to prove she is magnetic from vaccine during Ohio House hearing
An anti-vax nurse tried, and failed, to make a key stick to her neck as proof that COVID-19 vaccines make you magnetic

She actually, ACTUALLY decided to do this in the STATE LEGISLATIVE COMMITTEE.

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