International fact checking organizations Agence France Presse and Reuters recently flagged circulating videos of these experiments, which medical experts debunked as “nothing more than a conspiracy theory typical of the disinformation about the novel coronavirus.” To support her claims, Agno showed a video compilation of vaccinated people who did the “magnet test” which supposedly demonstrates that COVID-19 jabs use microchips for mind and behavior control. He said using light (optogenetics) and chemicals (chemogenetics) to control the responses of brain cells “have not yet been found successful in humans.” Pasco, who has a fellowship in neurogenetics, is a member of the Philippine Neurological Association. The study did mention a new protein called “Magneto” or magnetized protein but these are not included in the ingredients of any COVID-19 vaccines authorized by the World Health Organization, Meedan stated.Īsked about the research involving magneto, Filipino neurologist Paul Matthew Pasco told VERA Files Fact Check said: “It should be emphasized that other researchers tried to replicate these experiments to verify these findings, but did not come up with the same results, hence they doubt the findings of these earlier researchers.” But the experiment was performed only in animals, not human beings and no attempts at activating nerves in the brains of humans occurred. In a 56-minute FB live stream published last May 25, United Kingdom-based Filipina vlogger Lynn Agno cited the findings from a neuroscientific research on genetically engineered magnet proteins from a 2016 article by the The Guardian in Britain. “The amount of metal that would need to be in a vaccine for it to attract a magnet is much more substantial than the amounts that could be present in a vaccine’s small dose.” That means it can’t cause a magnetic response when it’s injected,” it said. “Only certain metals can trigger magnetic reactions, and the vaccine does not contain any metals at all. None of the ingredients in any of the vaccines are sources of electric and magnetic fields (EMFs), according to a team of health experts from global technology nonprofit Meedan. The Facebook (FB) Page Lynn Channel Warriors of Truth has made incorrect claims about the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccines, saying it is possible for people who receive the shot to develop a “magnetic field” due to a “genetically engineered magnet protein.”
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