None of the Covid vaccines used in the UK (Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Moderna) lists graphene oxide as an ingredient and all three companies deny its inclusion. And we have magnetic people after vaccination.’ Graphene oxide is magnetic.ĭr T said: ‘They want to say it is crazy for us to consider that such a thing could be in the vaccinations and yet the literature points to research being exactly in this area for years. The obvious questions are: what is in the vaccine to cause magnetic pull and what are the consequences for the magnetised?Ī former GP who prefers to remain anonymous hypothesises, and she stresses that it is a hypothesis, that graphene oxide, a synthetic form of carbon which is being studied as a vaccine delivery method, is the culprit. One lady cried and said that she had not wanted to be vaccinated but was forced to by her employer because she was in contact with customers.’ EFVV said: ‘It was an extremely disorienting experiment for some.
Some participants were shocked and upset at the results. The magnet adheres faster and holds better than in freshly vaccinated people.’ It seems that people who were vaccinated earlier are more electromagnetic than people who were vaccinated more recently. ‘Two individuals, a nurse who was one of the first to be vaccinated, and a financial analyst, showed abnormal electric field emission.
The magnet adhered to their skin without difficulty. In the vaccinated group, 29 of the 30 individuals showed attraction to the magnet. Their published report says: ‘In the non-vaccinated group, the number of people showing attraction to the magnet was zero.
There were 15 men and 15 women in each group. The organisation represents over 100,000 medical professionals and scientists, from pro-vaccine choice groups, who are fighting for the 258 million people in Europe who have no freedom of choice when it comes to vaccination.ĮFVV randomly interviewed 30 vaccinated and 30 unvaccinated people between June 1 and June 5. ‘Sensing the magnet being repelled and trying to flip so that the correct polarity was in contact with the skin was mind-blowing.’Ī group called the European Forum for Vaccine Vigilance (EFVV) representing 25 European countries, took the magnet challenge to the Belle-Étoile shopping centre in Strassen, Luxembourg. Feeling a magnet being tugged out of your hand, by a subtle yet defined magnetic force from under the skin of a living human being, is quite a shock. Even though I was inches away, I asked Carl to take the camera so I could try for myself. Playne told me: ‘Lorraine’s son Carl demonstrated the spot of magnetism on his mother. The fact checkers said the video was a fake but none of them bothered to visit her and test for themselves. Not On The Beeb founder and award-winning director Mark Playne tracked down a woman called Lorraine whose Instagram post of a magnet sticking to the Pfizer vaccine site on her left arm went viral. It has been left to independent associations, doctors and journalists to test the phenomenon. He didn’t provide them with answers instead he focused on one TikTok prankster called Emily who admitted she’d licked a magnet as a joke and stuck it to her arm.
Social media including TikTok, Facebook and Instagram have been awash with videos showing people with magnets sticking to the exact spot on their arms where they had received a Covid jab. See some independently verified examples here.Īll three companies went to great lengths to explain why a magnet cannot possibly cling to your skin, without experimenting on a single vaccinated person to see what would happen.īBC fact checker Jack Goodman spoke to many who said the magnet challenge worked for them and ‘were genuinely curious as to why’. FACT checkers at the BBC, Reuters and Snopes have been busy debunking the Covid vaccine ‘magnet challenge’.