Graphene - what is it doing in mRNA vaccines?
(odysee.com)
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I think graphene was a controlled op narrative to distract from what could really be in there.
You mentioned iron. There have been studies on ferritin proteins which attach to targeted regions of the brain to be activated magnetically https://www.theguardian.com/science/neurophilosophy/2016/mar/24/magneto-remotely-controls-brain-and-behaviour. This seems like the most likely approach rather than some futuristic cyborg technology.
Let's imagine that we have some foreign particles in bloodstrem.
Overall, this particles either will be attacked by leukocytes, either will be left intact if they are chemically passive. In any case, most of them will end in liver, which have a function of blood filter for our body, and later will be extorted with bile.
If particles are magnets by itself, they will not be able to form suspension in a not-a-vaccine and will qickly stick to each other in a vial into single blob, long before an injection.
So, to show effect declared in video, particles should be ferromagnetic, but not magnetized and be too small to be able to form a suspension. This will make not-a-vaccine kind of very low density magnetic liquid
What could be a purpose of injection of magnetic liquid into human body? I have no any idea, really. Theoretically, this ferromagnetic particles could create some mess in body (in liver?) in case of taking MRI scan, since very powerful magnets are in use. IDK, not-a-vaccine produce miocarditis in person, person took MRI scan, ferromagnetic particles damage liver in addition to heart, or do that stuff mentioned in article you linked?
Articles mentioned in your link tell about using very strong magnets near the sample, and apart MRI scans, only known case when strong magnets was used on jabbed is, suddenly, only that "jab spot is magnetic!" videos. Kind of strange, isn't it?
Another option is a probability that some ferromagnetic particles will end in hearing circuit of human. Then, if they will settle in the right place, one could kind of hear long-wave AM broadcasts. You could remember that ferrite core antennas in old radios.Something like that in smaller variant. Voices in your head, yes. But to use that for some bad things you have to transmit powerful AM broadcast over long-waves. And it will be easily received also by anybody with AM receiver. Of course AM as broadcast media is nearly extinct today, only few stations is alive. But since AM band is empty, it attracted attention of amateurs who often experiment in it. There are still a lot of very vigilant hams around who will notice weird transmissions and publish them on their forums. But I didn't see any reports about weird transmissions in AM band apart traditional reports about "number stations".
All in all, I don't see anything that could be useful enough for malisious actors to run such a complex project like coronahoax just to inject ferromagnetic particles into population. And even as side-effect it does not have any sense.
I could only suppose that the whole jab thing was a broad test of a lot of different compositions on a very large sampling to find something useful for elites by banal bruteforce method. That is why too many too different side effects from different not-a-vaccines batches we observe. Some random batches of not-a-vaccine could have also ferromagnetic particles as part of bruteforce try.
I imagine it would be something transmitted from a cell phone that everyone carries. Or something in the towers. I don't think a potential voice transmission is limited to the AM frequency bands. For example V2K is microwave frequency. Not that I'm an expert in the subject, but I realize there is a lot that can be done with frequencies.
I can't speak to most of your points, I know very little about the pharmacokinetics of these types of materials or what delivery systems they could be using to bypass normal metabolism. Also the question about interaction with an MRI machine is worth thinking about.
Good suggestion, but ferromagnetic antennas are not good at receiving anything high-frequency. And gadgets and cell towers does not have antennas suitable for long-wave transmission.
If you want go this way, I'll suggest using power lines as long-wave antennas to interfere with ferromagnetic particles in jabbed people. At least power lines is only existing infrastructure that is more or less suitable for transmitting signals as long-wave antennas.
It will be interesting to check power line voltage for 100kHz-5MHz low frequency noise/signal on top of 50/60 sine wave. AM long-wave signal could be injected in local power lines at local substations.
If there was any suspicious upgrades/repairs on power line substations or appearence of strange equipment on power line poles just before or during coronahoax, it could be interesting to check what exactly was replaced/installed.
In this case it is limited with properties of ferromagnetic particles as ferromagnetic antennas. At any frequences higner than few MHz, ferromagnetic antenna have extremely poor efficiency. That is why any multi-band portable radio from the past had ferromagnetic antenna for long-wave AM and telescopic one for short-wave bands. Vintage tube radios had a socket to connect external antenna on the back, and for long/mid-wave bands you need a piece of long wire of at least several meters.
Also, oxide layer on particle could be used as detector diode for demodulating carrier signal and turning it to something meaningful, f.e. "voice".
IDK, I think theory about not-a-vaccine ferromagnetic particles for receiving long/mid-wave AM signals in attempt to induce "voices in head" in subjects using some devices at power line substations that inject AM long/mid-wave signal into power lines looks more logical, consecutive and rational than all that "magnets stick to graphene in jab" shit. And it doesn't need any magic of non-existing technologies, easy to implement and could be falsified by checking power line voltage and equipment on substations.
Also strange that this simple theory does not pop up after that "magnetic jabs" videos. Well, it is not so entertaining, quasi-scientific and fashionable as "5G WiFi6 router nanomachines", but why the hell not a single take on "power lines, AM and ferromagnetics" at all?
PS: Why the hell nearly everything suspicious today have to be connected with smartphones, cell towers (5G only, looks like 3G/4G are fine), some overhyped substances and AI? Just like somebody who wrote marketing articles for corporations switched to creating "conspiracy theories". :)
I can speak to 5G being alarming. It is in part because the push for it was done with such zealotry it raised suspicions. If you look at the way former FCC chairman Tom Wheeler promoted it, you'd think it was the second coming. https://www.bitchute.com/video/9LZph9TJxGrm/
Many of us sense some real dark energy there, and I'm sure as a more rational technology minded person that might seem like woo to you.
But beyond what Mr. Wheeler says himself being creepy and zealtous, the fact an FCC chairman is giving any speeches pushing a technology is bizarre. The FCC is supposed to be a regulatory agency, not a cheerleader for industry.
Beyond that is the skipping of any safety testing for these new frequency bands. Again it is oddly reckless and zealous. And given the fact we know these elites want to depopulate the planet, this apparent recklessness should be a concern.
I see you're well versed on radio transmission technology and I'm learning something. Though I think there are still too many assumptions made about the injected technology to say anything definitively. Can we be sure they are using something ferromagnetic, or is it paramagnetic? Is it iron based or is it something else? Perhaps it is something novel and tuned to a microwave frequency which 5G can interact with. Perhaps not. Too many unknowns in the equations, but I don't discount your theory at all. Maybe they use something people aren't expecting, like AM frequencies.