a reply to:
SeaWorthy
Look, I'm not going to spend the next 10 years of my life explaining how these fools making these videos are clueless. So far I have gone through
probably 100 different links provided by people which have absolutely nothing to do with arms turning magnetic.
I am going to address this video.
At around the 1:39 mark, it says this (thank you closed captioning):
If you can get a magnetic particle to go into a cancer cell and you apply a
magnetic field then these materials can heat up and they can kill the cancer cell whereas a normal cell, a healthy cell, does not die as quickly when
that temperature increases.
That is mostly true, with one notable exception: just the application of a magnetic field to ferromagnetic particles does not cause it to heat up.
Want proof? Stick a magnet on your refrigerator. Is it heating up around the magnet? You just applied a magnetic field to the iron in the door... so
why isn't it heating up?
It doesn't heat up because the magnetic field applied is stable. In order to create heat, there must be motion. That's what heat is: kinetic motion of
the atomic elements involved. Electricity through a conductor creates heat because the charged particles (mostly electrons) are moving... they have
motion, and they bump into atoms in the conductor and make them move.
To heat up iron nanoparticles (which are simply single atoms of iron not bonded together in a matrix) in a cell, one must apply a high frequency
alternating magnetic field that will shift the iron nanoparticles back and forth. That will create heat. Now, exactly how do these vaccine
manufacturers expect to apply a high frequency alternating magnetic field to people? Devices do exist to produce these, but they are usually custom
built. I actually have a couple I have built here for testing purposes. I built them from scratch because I could not find one commercially available.
There's just not enough demand for them.
Incidentally, ferrofluid is nothing new. Want some? I can make it any time I want, right here. The only reason it isn't widely known among the general
population is that there really aren't many practical uses for it yet. At one time there was a proposal to use it to adjust shock absorbers in
automobiles on the fly... never took off. The magnetic fields required were just too hard to maintain under changing environmental conditions. It is
used in laboratories where fields can be precisely controlled.
The substance found in the Japanese vaccines was very, very similar to ferrofluid. If it hadn't clumped, it would
be ferrofluid... suspended
iron (II, III) oxide, Fe3O4. And it was causing some very severe side effects, which incidentally did not include magnetic arms.
The cancer idea is at least 5 years old. I met a young lady years or so ago at a University science exhibit who was working on this idea as part of
her dissertation. The idea is to get the iron nanoparticles into cells around the cancer and apply a high frequency alternating magnetic field in a
machine similar to an MRI machine. The problems are:
- Getting the iron into the cells without causing iron overload conditions in the body
- ensuring the correct amount of iron nanoparticles have been assimilated by the cancer cells
- Verifying the exact amount of magnetic intensity that is required
- Monitoring heat production that deep in the body.
As far as I know, they still haven't worked those issues out. The procedure is still
considered far too dangerous for human trials.
So you are suggesting that the pharmaceuticals making this vaccine are purposely including ferrofluid-like materials (at great cost), chancing killing
most if not all who take the vaccine without any actual use for them except to make magnets stick to arms? And that a tiny amount of fluid is going to
pull this much larger, much more massive magnet to it and not be pulled toward the magnet?
What exactly is this sorcery?
To close, if you haven't "gotten it" by now, you never will. So you can either accept that you are being told fairy tales that cannot possibly exit in
our physical universe, or you can believe in magic. Your choice; choose wisely.
TheRedneck