Ministry Of Health Denies COVID-19 Vaccine Contains Microcip In Today's Memory, May 28, 2021
JAKARTA Memories of today, four years ago, May 28, 2021, the Ministry of Health (Kemenkes) denied the issue of a COVID-19 vaccine containing magnetic microcipes. They emphasized that the injection liquid was insignificant and everything immediately spread throughout the body.
Previously, the citizens of the world were divided into two matters of the corona vaccine. The narrative is because there are world leaders who do not require their citizens to use vaccines. There are also conspiracy theorists who say vaccines contain magnetic microcips.
The world health agency, WHO considers vaccination a major step against the COVID-19 pandemic. Strong immune makes the coronavirus difficult to enter the body. WHO's desire was then taken seriously by the world pharmaceutical company.
They are competing to be able to present the right vaccine. The effort is clearly not easy. Vaccines are believed to take a long time to create. The trial process to distribution permits can take years. However, due to the high urgency of vaccine manufacturing, it is speeding up.
One by one the vaccines began to be created and ready to be distributed from 2021. The presence of vaccines was welcomed. Although not a few doubt the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccine could end the pandemic. The reasons that have been revealed vary. Some consider short research times.
There are also those who think vaccines are the global elite's agenda so that humans depend on pharmaceuticals. The narrative is spread throughout the world. Moreover, not a few leaders of countries in the world do not care about vaccine matters.
Vaccination efforts are returned entirely to the people. Those who want vaccines are welcome. Those who don't want to be allowed to. The problem of distrust of vaccines also arises among conspiracy lovers. In Indonesia, let alone.
Messages in the form of videos that reveal a COVID-19 vaccine containing magnetic microcipes are spreading everywhere. The most popular video is a video showing someone placing a Rp1,000 coin in the arm of a former COVID-19 vaccination.
As a result, coins are attached. They consider it a form of magnetic microcipe grown through the COVID-19 vaccine. In fact, many world scientists have denied the issue of microcip.
"Even if you inject a very magnetic particle, its size will be very small, so there won't be enough power to actually hold the magnet attached to your skin," said US National High Magnetic Field Laboratory physicist Eric Palm as quoted by the ANTARA page, May 27, 2021.
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The issue of the COVID-19 vaccine containing magnetic microcipes brought a stir. The Ministry of Health immediately spoke up. The Ministry of Health denies the narrative that the COVID-19 vaccine contains microcips on May 28, 2021. The Ministry of Health revealed that the COVID-19 vaccine cannot be infiltrated by microcips.
The narrative is because the liquid that is injected is only 0.5 cc. Once injected the liquid will spread throughout the surrounding tissue. All kinds of microcips and others are unlikely. The video circulating that metal sticks to the surface of the skin because there is microcip is certainly not true.
Metals stick due to the moist surface of the skin from sweat. The Ministry of Health also reminded the public not to quickly believe news that is not necessarily true.
A metal can stick to the surface of a humid skin usually caused by sweat. The broken Rp1,000 coin is made of nickel and nickel instead of material that can stick due to magnetic forces," said Ministry of Health's COVID-19 Vaccination Spokesperson, Siti Nadia Tarmizi as quoted on the Kemkes.go.id page, May 28, 2021.