Some coworkers and I were talking, and one is an older gentleman, and he said, “Have any of you taken the vaccine?” Several said no, and one friend said she had. He said that he had taken a magnet and rubbed it on an 86 year old lady’s arm where she had been given the shot. At first it did nothing. Then he washed her arm with soap and washed the magnet, dried both, and put the magnet on again, and it stuck. He said, “It really happened. I did it seven times.” So, of course, we wanted to test it out on the friend who has had the shot AND had covid about a month ago (months after she was vaccinated). She said, “I tried it, and it didn’t work.” But she agreed to test it again so we could see a magnet would not stick to her arm. Lo and behold, it stuck. She had the first shot in May and the second in June. I did not believe it would stick. But it did. On our way out the door, she said the vaccine site on her arm hurt again like it did when she had the shot.
OK. I know this has nothing to do with your experience. It is just something I found interesting that happened today.
I just want to see a magnetoflux meter or even a compass react to the injection spot (in controlled circumstances to eliminate funny business). Ideally supervised by a competent professional magician skeptic. Has this been done and documented adequately? As a control (I have not been vaxx’d) my compasses including the phone compass do not react to my arm.
same here