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This anti-vaccine nurse’s demonstration did not go as planned

COVID – On June 9, the Ohio House of Representatives Health Committee met. Those in attendance spoke about many topics related to coronavirus vaccines. Nurse Joanna Overholt spoke. She spoke about the potential dangers of these treatments with a very specific argument, as you can see in the video above.

“I just discovered something over lunch and wanted to show it to you,” she began. The nurse then took a key which she affixed to his chest. “Explain to me why the key is stuck to me. It sticks to my neck too, ”she continues. Unfortunately for Joanna Overholt, the key never managed to hang around her neck.

The false theory of vaccine magnetism was brought up earlier in the hearing by Ohio physician Sherri Tenpenny, who was cited by a watchdog as part of the “disinformation dozen,” the 12 people responsible for 65% of anti-vaccine misinformation shared on the Internet.

“I’m sure you’ve seen pictures all over the internet of people who have had these bites and are now magnetized,” continued Sherri Tenpenny, according to the Columbus Dispatch. “You can put a wrench on their forehead, it sticks. You can put spoons and forks everywhere and they can stick, because now we think there is a metal part. ”

Although Joanna Overholt and Sherri Tenpenny are medical professionals, they have ignored an obvious explanation for this key trick: the human body secretes a substance called sebum which is sticky enough to hold small objects, as our colleagues in the American HuffPost.

See also on The HuffPost: In India, dozens of elephants have undergone PCR tests

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