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[–] 2 pts

Nonmagnetic materials will not become magnetic if left in the same bag as a magnet. Leave a brass key in a bag with a magnet and the key will never, ever become magnetic. Same goes for aluminum, bronze, copper and stainless steel. Don't be retarded.

[–] 1 pt (edited )

And if it's iron? Edit: ah just read about how let's are no longer made with iron

[–] 0 pt

Iron would, but iron is already ferromagnetic. I will remind you of what your comment was:

If she left the key in the same bag of magnets she had there, it could become magnetized.

Now find me a modern key made out of iron. Good luck with that search.

even with those scissors i bet 100 dollars that they were stainless steel

[–] 0 pt

Good point. I had assumed she had an iron key. It's possible she meant "let's try it with a key," but I am open to it either being true or false in this case.

A lot of the deaths to the vaccine seem anemia related, and there was some talk about the RNA inducing protein construction using iron from the blood. So far that's the "theory" behind the "magnetic" aspects of this

specifically non ferrous, magnets need iron

[–] 0 pt

magnets need iron

Not necessarily. There are various alloys of non-ferrous metals that have strong magnetic capabilities and can hold a magnetic field (become magnets themselves). AlNiCo (aluminum, nickel and cobalt) magnets and the newer rare earth magnets (samarium cobalt and neodymium) do not use iron at all.

[–] 0 pt

False. Magnetic elements/alloys only need lone electron spins and special symmetries in their atomic lattice. Most of the common ones are ferrous, but definitely not all or a majority of known ferromagnetic materials.