I--flat out--don't believe any of this magnet garbage.
I work in in healthcare at a hospital, and I've not only been vaccinated myself, but I've helped vaccinate countless patients and staff members.
At any number of times, patients have been vaccinated within minutes to hours of going to an MRI, as an MRI is a standard medical imaging test for many different diseases and injuries.
The magnetic field in an MRI is many thousands of times stronger than the Earth's natural magnetic field. When I worked as a medic, a coworker thoughtlessly brought a steel oxygen cylinder into the MRI room, and they had to close the machine for the better part of a day as they had to get a special winch to pull the oxygen cylinder out of the MRI machine.
I abandoned steel-toed boots for this reason, as some steel-toed boots can make you fall around an MRI because you feel the tugging and pulling on your feet (depending upon what kind of steel is used to make the steel toes).
If there were magnetic particles and/or other magnetic substances in the vaccines, then there would be certian specific consequences with patients in MRI machines . . . and everybody (including myself) would know about it. You wouldn't be able to keep such an odd thing under wraps in a hospital, as we'd all be talking about it.
People gossip, nurses, technicians, and/or doctors often consult with each other on oddball circumstances that occur when rendering patient care, and so forth. People in healthcare like to discuss strange patient care findings, as we have a tradition of pooling our experience and knowledge. When I was a medic, an ambulance crew brought a hermaphroditic patient (an intersex patient) who was equipped with both male and female gentitalia to the hospital emergency department.
This crew gave these details in the radio report (we call the hospital ER with a radio report to give advance notice to allow the ER staff to prepare for the patient), and when they arrived, the ER was filled with students, nurses, and doctors . . . all of whom wanted to participate in patient care of this hermaphrodite . . . and everyone was talking about it for months.
If there was a magnetic property in the vaccines, I think I--personally--would know and/or have heard something about it, and I haven't.
This doesn't mean that I think that the vaccines don't have issues . . . just that they aren't magnetic.
Perhaps Dr. Jenner could weigh in on my arguments? If anyone disagrees with my reasoning, then please let me know.
I work in in healthcare at a hospital, and I've not only been vaccinated myself, but I've helped vaccinate countless patients and staff members.
At any number of times, patients have been vaccinated within minutes to hours of going to an MRI, as an MRI is a standard medical imaging test for many different diseases and injuries.
The magnetic field in an MRI is many thousands of times stronger than the Earth's natural magnetic field. When I worked as a medic, a coworker thoughtlessly brought a steel oxygen cylinder into the MRI room, and they had to close the machine for the better part of a day as they had to get a special winch to pull the oxygen cylinder out of the MRI machine.
I abandoned steel-toed boots for this reason, as some steel-toed boots can make you fall around an MRI because you feel the tugging and pulling on your feet (depending upon what kind of steel is used to make the steel toes).
If there were magnetic particles and/or other magnetic substances in the vaccines, then there would be certian specific consequences with patients in MRI machines . . . and everybody (including myself) would know about it. You wouldn't be able to keep such an odd thing under wraps in a hospital, as we'd all be talking about it.
People gossip, nurses, technicians, and/or doctors often consult with each other on oddball circumstances that occur when rendering patient care, and so forth. People in healthcare like to discuss strange patient care findings, as we have a tradition of pooling our experience and knowledge. When I was a medic, an ambulance crew brought a hermaphroditic patient (an intersex patient) who was equipped with both male and female gentitalia to the hospital emergency department.
This crew gave these details in the radio report (we call the hospital ER with a radio report to give advance notice to allow the ER staff to prepare for the patient), and when they arrived, the ER was filled with students, nurses, and doctors . . . all of whom wanted to participate in patient care of this hermaphrodite . . . and everyone was talking about it for months.
If there was a magnetic property in the vaccines, I think I--personally--would know and/or have heard something about it, and I haven't.
This doesn't mean that I think that the vaccines don't have issues . . . just that they aren't magnetic.
Perhaps Dr. Jenner could weigh in on my arguments? If anyone disagrees with my reasoning, then please let me know.
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