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[–] 2 pts

I have some of that magnetic field viewing film. It works well enough with strong magnets, but I doubt it would do much if the experimental mRNA vaxx was actually producing a magnetic field.

Yeah, the hoaxsters need to make up their minds. Either the vaxx is ferromagnetic and attracts magnets, or, the vaxx is itself magnetic and attracts ferromagnetic objects. The likelihood of it having its own magnetic field would be very low since that would mean the particles would all need to be in alignment (magnetic domain alignment) in order to concentrate the field. People obviously don't know how magnets work.

Definitely avoid this experimental genetic treatment shit they call a vaccine. It's more dangerous than the virus that you have to get tested for to know you have and have a ~99.7% or surviving anyway.

[–] 1 pt

Yeah, the hoaxsters need to make up their minds.

Spaghetti meet wall. Whichever sticks with the yokels is what they will use to discredit credible doubts about the virus. Just like the flat earth shit.

[–] 0 pt

can show the magnetic lines on magnetic cassette. Expensive (>$100). Pretty cool stuff.

But most smartphones these days have a sensitive compass (X/Y/Z) and you can get apps that show the field strengths. That would detect even minute changes near someone's vaxx site.

[–] 0 pt

I'm familiar with the viewing device Techmoan demonstrated. That could be more effective, but it too cannot pick up all weak fields on all types of magnetic media (as he demonstrated in another video some time later). I doubt it would work in this case though.

I wouldn't count on the MEMS magnetometer in a smartphone to be of any use in testing this. Unless you can magnetically shield the sensor from the environmental magnetic fields (the Earth, nearby motors, transformers of electric power lines), then you will not be able to honestly say the fluctuations are purely from the vaxx site. Even am expensive and highly sensitive probe magnetometer would be of little help proving this without shielding (which in itself uses magnetic fields to counteract other magnetic fields).

[–] 0 pt

Hold phone still, note any variations. Have person move vaxxed arm near it. Move unvaxxed arm. Someone else move their arm near it. That would at least establish that there is no difference in reading. Some of the apps will graph the readings. They're also pretty damn sensitive, where I can detect a ~2" dia magnet from way across the room.