

#MAGNET STICKING TO SHOULDER FREE#
"All COVID-19 vaccines are free from metals such as iron, nickel, cobalt, lithium, and rare earth alloys, as well as any manufactured products such as microelectronics, electrodes, carbon nanotubes, and nanowire semiconductors. COVID-19 vaccines do not contain ingredients that can produce an electromagnetic field at the site of your injection. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued information on June 3, debunking the theory: "Receiving a COVID-19 vaccine will not make you magnetic, including at the site of vaccination which is usually your arm. Since the rollout of the vaccine, recipients have sparked a rapidly spreading theory that the vaccine makes your arm magnetic, suggesting there is some kind of metal in the dose. In my first video you can clearly see that I am shocked that it actually to ♬ original sound - Rob Marrocco "Much like everyone else, I thought it was all made up until my girlfriend's mom insisted that I stick a magnet to my arm. But then it just turns out I was another sucker who fell for it and started telling everybody I knew, before doing any of the testing myself," he added. "Everybody secretly wants to find out that some larger-than-life thing they read on the internet is actually true. and the magnet is sticking to the iron in my blood?' Looking back, yeah, kind of a stretch," he said. my mind immediately thought 'oh, maybe there's like, a lot of blood in that area because its sore. "I would like to issue a public apology for being an idiot," he summarized at the end.Īlthough Marrocco was seemingly duped by the magnet, he told Newsweek that he never believed any deeper conspiracy about it: "I should be clear, I never thought that there was a tracking chip in me, or that the needle broke off, or something like that. Unlike before, the magnet did not stick to Marrocco's arm this time and instead slipped off completely and onto the floor after a few attempts.

"It's impossible for it to be sticky now, and if this sticks I'm going to freak out." "To prove that this is not my sticky skin, I got baby powder that we're going to put on my arm," he said.

On June 6, Marrocco did exactly that and rubbed baby powder on his arm at the start of the video, in an attempt to prove the magnet sticking was due to his arm being magnetic, rather than just slightly sticky. "Put baby powder on that spot and try the same thing," suggested a viewer in the comments. In a follow-up video, he again showed the magnet stuck to his arm, this time poking it to prove its durability.

Any health concerns should receive medical attention as appropriate following which you can work on complementary methods. The use of magnet therapy for pain should not replace traditional medical management appropriate diagnosis and conventional treatment has its own importance. Presently, more research is being conducted on the use of magnet therapy and can be considered only as a complementary modality. Safety First- Magnet Therapy as a Complementary Treatment Modality Only
