“I’m sure you’ve seen the pictures all over the internet of people who have had these shots and now they’re magnetized,” Tenpenny said to the panel of lawmakers.
“They can put a key on their forehead and it sticks … There have been people who have long suspected there’s an interface, yet to be defined, an interface between what’s being injected in these shots and all of the 5G towers.”
The comments backfired. Gross’ bill stalled out after Tenpenny’s comments. And they sparked the investigation that would cost Tenpenny her license.
Nutter lost her license. Good.
I think she’s just made up the magnetized thing, I’ve not heard anyone else make that claim before, you know because it’s easily disprovable.
Also why would anyone deliberately magnetize the population what’s the benefits supposed to be?
I wish these idiots would come up with conspiracy theories at least had some internal consistency.
Nah, it’s been around for a while. Someone pulled it in front of a public forum and the speaker made him put talc on it and try again. The look of sheer confusion and mild sadness when it fell of was golden.
@schroedingershat @echodot
Wasn’t it a woman?
Now I gotta go find it.
Yeah that’s who this article is about. She’s rightfully lost her medical licence.
But what I’m saying is I don’t think I’ve heard anyone else say it makes you magnetic.
… Maybe that when you turn on the supermagnets on the, uhm, poles, or in China or something, everyone lines up pretty well adjusted rows automatically? And everyone would face the same way. There’s gotta be some benefit in that.