COVID-19: Vaccine Magnet Test is a Hoax – Part 1



In a previous post on August 6, 2021, I questioned the veracity of the results of the so-called vaccine magnet test, which had been shared with me by a Facebook friend. According to that person, as well as other persons who have supposedly conducted the very same test, the COVID-19 vaccines contain metallic particles, or perhaps even a microchip … at least according to said persons.

From the start, I found this claim to be highly doubtful, as I informed the person who first shared this information with me. Well, as it turns out, the article below — which is found on the Reuters news website — clearly confirms what I had already theorized regarding there not being enough metal in these vaccines to attract a magnet in that way, even if the vaccines do contain metallic substances, which this Reuters article claims that they don’t. In particular, consider these four paragraphs from the article in question:

—– Begin Quote —–

Secondly, none of the COVID-19 jabs approved in the United Kingdom or the United States contain metallic ingredients (here , here , here and here). Many other shots do have small amounts of aluminium, which does not stick to magnets, (here) but Oxford University researchers say this is no more harmful than the minimal quantities found naturally in almost all foods and drinking water (here).

Thirdly, even if COVID-19 vaccines did contain magnetic metals, they would not cause a magnetic reaction. Medical professionals at the Meedan Health Desk said: “The amount of metal that would need to be in a vaccine for it to attract a magnet is much more substantial than the amounts that could be present in a vaccine’s small dose” (here).

Professor Michael Coey from the School of Physics at Trinity College Dublin (here) also described the claims as “complete nonsense”, telling Reuters via email that you would need about one gram of iron metal to attract and support a permanent magnet at the injection site, something you would “easily feel” if it was there.

“By the way, my wife was injected with her second dose of the Pfizer vaccine today, and I had mine over two weeks ago. I have checked that magnets are not attracted to our arms!”, he wrote.

—– End Quote —–

So there you have it. Believe it or not, as you will.

Here is a link to the full Reuters article:

https://www.reuters.com/article/factcheck-coronavirus-vaccine/correction-fact-check-magnet-test-does-not-prove-covid-19-jabs-contain-metal-or-a-microchip-idUSL2N2N41KA

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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2 Responses to COVID-19: Vaccine Magnet Test is a Hoax – Part 1

  1. JD says:

    I personally have witnessed with my own eyes two people in my hometown , both if whom had gotten the double shot, stick magnets to their first injection site and the magnet stay attached.

  2. Bill Kochman says:

    JD, then in my view, it must be due to some other reason. Please carefully re-read my entire commentary. As I said, even if the serum does contain metallic particles — which I cannot prove or disprove — it is impossible for it to contain a sufficient amount for a magnet to react in that manner; particularly because the minute particles would not even be near the surface of the skin.

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