This citation may have phony contrived content but it is worth considering whether graphene reacts to MRI fields.
Graphene is NOT magnetic, but it is electrically conducting. Can MRI magnets induce currents in the graphene and thereby create electromotive forces? Yes on induction, but no on electromotive forces strong enough to have enough force to damage cells. Counter-EMF will be on the order of microNewtons for nano-size particles. That is not going to cause shrapnel level of neural damage.
The cited page of warnings has no links to verifiable evidence and I think it is fear-mongering without proof. I examined the content of the site and it is a slick con game perhaps to get clicks.
Case One has fake items. It says " in an attempt to understand the magnetism, [patient] was given several MRI scans. " NO. First, none of the so-called spoons sticking to arms cases are real. True they have been publicized but they are not backed by actual medical exams. Second, you do not give MRIs to investigate magnetism. If there is any magnetic material in a body, MRI is contra-indicated. No one would do an MRI for that.
Case Two demonstrates no verifiable causality link for the case events.
This website masquerades as science but it is not. To me it reads like article assignments given to some content writer to research and try to validate a premise. Beware.
It does need investigation. Although I said graphene oxide is not magnetic, here's what I think happens:
the graphene either encages some magnetite or already has attached magnetite within the vax
the captured magnetite captures other magnetite outside the trapped particle.
this structure builds into random clumps that grow.
that messes up the blood stream together with the S protein damaging endothelial cells in blood transport channels. The combined effect damages blood flow and may lead to the MRI damage too.
A problem with this theory is, why doesn't vaccine in the vial self-aggregate with the other magnetite present in the vial?
This citation may have phony contrived content but it is worth considering whether graphene reacts to MRI fields.
Graphene is NOT magnetic, but it is electrically conducting. Can MRI magnets induce currents in the graphene and thereby create electromotive forces? Yes on induction, but no on electromotive forces strong enough to have enough force to damage cells. Counter-EMF will be on the order of microNewtons for nano-size particles. That is not going to cause shrapnel level of neural damage.
The cited page of warnings has no links to verifiable evidence and I think it is fear-mongering without proof. I examined the content of the site and it is a slick con game perhaps to get clicks.
Case One has fake items. It says " in an attempt to understand the magnetism, [patient] was given several MRI scans. " NO. First, none of the so-called spoons sticking to arms cases are real. True they have been publicized but they are not backed by actual medical exams. Second, you do not give MRIs to investigate magnetism. If there is any magnetic material in a body, MRI is contra-indicated. No one would do an MRI for that.
Case Two demonstrates no verifiable causality link for the case events.
This website masquerades as science but it is not. To me it reads like article assignments given to some content writer to research and try to validate a premise. Beware.
Nonetheless, do not get the vax.
It does need investigation. Although I said graphene oxide is not magnetic, here's what I think happens:
A problem with this theory is, why doesn't vaccine in the vial self-aggregate with the other magnetite present in the vial?
Good analysis re the temperature possible effect. It makes sense to me physics-wise.