To: Fred Nerks; Candor7; LucyT
Been watching these people suddenly become "magnetic" after the jab and it really baffled me. I though it was some kind of joke but it turns out that when Graphene comes into contact with Hydrogen it's magnetic properties get "turned on."Here is just one of hundreds of examples of it's magnetic properties.. “Magnetism in graphene can be controlled with hydrogen atoms”
Being able to carry a current Graphene will also be effected by EMF and that just gets into the whole Five G thing.
I have also just heard of people showing that their packaged chicken meat is magnetic.
Some scary shit...
172 posted on
08/05/2021 4:20:56 AM PDT by
GregNH
(If you can't fight, please find a good place to hide! )
To: GregNH
GRAPHENE BAD FOR ENVIRONMENT TOXIC FOR HUMANS. LINK Two recent studies give us a less than rosy angle. In the first, a team of biologists, engineers and material scientists at Brown University examined graphene’s potential toxicity in human cells. They found that the jagged edges of graphene nanoparticles, super sharp and super strong, easily pierced through cell membranes in human lung, skin and immune cells, suggesting the potential to do serious damage in humans and other animals. 
The bottom corner of a piece of graphene penetrates a cell membrane - mechanical properties like rough edges and sharp corners can make graphene dangerous to human cells. Scale bar represents two microns. (Image: Kane lab/Brown University) "These materials can be inhaled unintentionally, or they may be intentionally injected or implanted as components of new biomedical technologies," said Robert Hurt, professor of engineering and one of the study’s authors. "So we want to understand how they interact with cells once inside the body."
173 posted on
08/05/2021 5:08:09 AM PDT by
Fred Nerks
(fair dinkum!)
To: GregNH
GRAPHENE BAD FOR ENVIRONMENT TOXIC FOR HUMANS. LINK Two recent studies give us a less than rosy angle. In the first, a team of biologists, engineers and material scientists at Brown University examined graphene’s potential toxicity in human cells. They found that the jagged edges of graphene nanoparticles, super sharp and super strong, easily pierced through cell membranes in human lung, skin and immune cells, suggesting the potential to do serious damage in humans and other animals. 
The bottom corner of a piece of graphene penetrates a cell membrane - mechanical properties like rough edges and sharp corners can make graphene dangerous to human cells. Scale bar represents two microns. (Image: Kane lab/Brown University) "These materials can be inhaled unintentionally, or they may be intentionally injected or implanted as components of new biomedical technologies," said Robert Hurt, professor of engineering and one of the study’s authors. "So we want to understand how they interact with cells once inside the body."
174 posted on
08/05/2021 5:13:23 AM PDT by
Fred Nerks
(fair dinkum!)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson