COVID-19: Have You Heard of the Vaccine Magnet Test?



Dear friends, one of my Facebook friends just informed me of something which I find quite unusual, and in fact rather unbelievable. So, I decided to share it with all of my friends to see what you think.

According to my friend, after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, two members of her extended family applied a small refrigerator magnet to their bodies, and the magnet stuck in both cases.

Please note that she does not specify exactly where — that is, on what part of the body — the magnet test was conducted. I am waiting for a response from her regarding that point, because I believe that it is important.

Has anyone else here who has taken the vaccine experienced anything like this? Even if you haven’t, I would be very interested in your thoughts.

As for me, after giving it some consideration, I wrote back to my friend with the following:

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That is just plain weird. I tend to be a very logical, analytical person. I try to understand things. So, a few questions if I may.

1. What gave your sister-in-law and her mother the idea to even do that?

2. What part of their body did they apply the magnet to?

3. How soon after the vaccine was injected did they use the magnet?

4. Are you saying that the magnet actually stuck to their skin?

To be quite honest, as a logically-thinking person, I find the story difficult to believe. Let me explain why I have my doubts.

First of all, while I have not personally taken the vaccine, I would assume that whatever amount of actual serum it contains must be quite small if it is injected into one’s shoulder via a regular syringe. I am thinking along the lines of 30 CCs or less.

Assuming that is the case, then I would think that the amount of solid particles in the serum portion of the vaccine is considerably smaller than that.

Now, if the vaccine does contain any metallic substances — I have not personally researched this — I would think that the magnet would have to be applied immediately and directly to the injection site, in order for what they say happened, to actually happen.

Even then, I still have my doubts, because I have a hard time believing that the vaccine could contain a sufficient amount of metallic particles for that to even happen.

But let’s go on.

When that vaccine is injected, it is injected deep into the shoulder muscles, I assume. From there, I imagine that it immediately begins to be carried from the injection site to other parts of the body via the bloodstream.

So what does that mean? It means that the vaccine is very much diluted throughout the body — probably almost imperceptible — so that even if it does contain any metallic substances, they too are going to be very thinned out.

Thus, in my view, and with my limited understanding, I would think that if that magnet test were conducted on any part of the body other than the actual injection site, there would be zero results, because there simply wouldn’t be enough metallic particles present to allow for it to occur.

Getting back to the shoulder, even if the vaccine does contain a sufficient amount of metallic particles — which again, I have not confirmed — they would have to remain at the injection site long enough — and at a shallow enough depth — for them to have any effect on the magnet, which I still doubt.

So, in my view, if both your sister-in-law and her mother really did experience that, then I would have to conclude that it is due to something else; particularly if the magnet test was conducted on some other part of the body other than the shoulder area.

My key thought here is that a person’s body would have to have quite a concentration of metallic substances in it — either in the flesh, bones or blood — for this type of magnetic reaction to even occur.

So what does that mean? It implies longterm exposure to something metallic in their environment; perhaps in the water they drink, or maybe in the air they breath, or perhaps in some food that they constantly eat, or in something else.

But as I just said, it would have to be longterm exposure, so that the concentration of those metallic particles could build up to a sufficient level in the body, to allow the magnetic reaction to occur.

As a logically-thinking person who has no scientific background, those are my personal thoughts on the matter. I hope I have got your brain ticking on this. ?

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So, what are your thoughts, my friends? I am not interested in wild, unproven conspiracy theories. Let’s deal with real scientific possibilities to try to explain this. Thanks!

Bill Kochman

Bill Kochman is a Christian writer, poet, graphic artist, online evangelist and founder and webmaster of the Bill's Bible Basics website and blog, as well as the founder and administrator of the Christian Social Network. His interests include tropical fish, Macintosh computers, web design, writing poetry, God's natural creation and his cats, Obsidian, Mischief and their progeny, such as Polo and Eljio.

About Bill Kochman

Bill Kochman is a Christian writer, poet, graphic artist, online evangelist and founder and webmaster of the Bill's Bible Basics website and blog, as well as the founder and administrator of the Christian Social Network. His interests include tropical fish, Macintosh computers, web design, writing poetry, God's natural creation and his cats, Obsidian, Mischief and their progeny, such as Polo and Eljio.
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