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[–] 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

[–] 0 pt

The problem with the iron protein idea being the reason for the magnetic effect is that iron in a molecular bond with anything makes the iron non-magnetic. Only free iron or iron alloyed with other metals would allow for a magnetic effect to occur. Free molecular iron (FE2) would rapidly oxidize in the body and become non-magnetic.

Having iron in the blood (hemoglobin) or bound to proteins is why our blood does not try to jump out of our bodies when we get an MRI scan. The molecular bonds render the iron unaffected by magnetism. Same goes for iron oxide pigments (red, black and yellow) found in tattoo inks will not be affected by MRIs or other strong magnetic sources. This is why I have 100% doubt on the claims of magnetism from the mRNA vaxx. It just doesn't fit the chemistry or physics at all. It's bullshit.

[–] 1 pt

Sure! I hear that out and generally agree. Especially on the oxidization of free molecular iron, it'd have to be shepherded to something else for it to make sense at all

There have been some papers found on making microcrystaline iron particles, would these be magnetic? I think that their structure being larger than their molecular bonds has that possibility? Stuff like with magnetogenetics / magnetoprotein seems shifty... There's definitely been work done on such, but I can't see why it'd literally be "magnetic" to a fridge magnet unless it was possibly concentrated iron crystals being constructed in the cells

It has also been suggested that part of what was injected could be a graphene hydrogel, but I have yet to look into the implications/possibility of that

Just trying to make heads from tails here