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Reason: None provided.

I imagine it would be something transmitted from a cell phone that everyone carries. Or something in the towers.

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.

I don't think a potential voice transmission is limited to the AM frequency bands.

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". :)

271 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I imagine it would be something transmitted from a cell phone that everyone carries. Or something in the towers.

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.

I don't think a potential voice transmission is limited to the AM frequency bands.

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?

271 days ago
1 score