![]() ![]() saying that if theyve been vaccinated with the COVID-19 vaccine. After all, anyone can make an assertion without providing any real hard evidence such as hedgehogs are taking over the Senate and squirrels are trading too much Bitcoin to make the market unstable. A known anti-vaccine advocate made allegations during Tuesday’s Ohio House Health Committee hearing on House Bill 248 claiming that the shot leads to magnetism and causes metal objects to stick. OAN hosts woman who claims the Pfizer vaccine made her arm magnetic. A Covid-19 vaccine dose is even less than a. And that issue has been the lack of scientific evidence supporting such claims. Covid-19 vaccines would require to contain a good amount of metal in them to induce metallic abilities in the bones, for magnets to stick on the body. There is one recurring issue issue with all of these claims, the claim that the Covid-19 vaccine is implanting a microchip so that magnets can stick to your arm, the claim that the Covid-19 vaccine can magnetize you, and the claim that the Covid-19 vaccine is somehow connected to 5G. ![]() So how exactly might Covid-19 vaccines make you magnetic but not in a personality sort of way? Tenpenny for your thoughts? Well, she continued by saying, “There's been people who have long suspected that there was some sort of an interface, 'yet to be defined' interface, between what’s being injected in these shots and all of the 5G towers.” Oh, 5G, here we go with the 5G conspiracy theory that I have covered for Forbes previously. ![]() At least though, this could keep from losing your keys, assuming that you could locate your face every day. As you can see, things could get quite out of hand or face for that matter. Sherri Tenpenny has claimed that the coronavirus vaccine is actively magnetizing people, stating in her testimony, 'I'm sure you've seen the pictures all over the internet of people. ![]()
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