Prime Minister Scott Morrison said public gatherings would be limited to two people and ordered residents to stay home, except to shop for necessities, medical care, exercise, work or education.
In response to the outbreak, the country tightened its restrictions on movement Monday. The flawed claim was made in a series of viral videos claiming to show magnets attracted to the arms of alleged jab recipients. So far, Australia has had over 4,200 cases of coronavirus and 17 deaths, according to figures from Johns Hopkins University.
"But other than that I was laughing with everyone else." FULL CLAIM: COVID-19 vaccines contain metals or microchips that cause magnets to attach to the arm of vaccinated people REVIEW Around mid-May 2021, multiple videos (examples here, here, and here) claimed that COVID-19 vaccines caused magnetic reactions in vaccinated people. "I was in a bit of pain while they were moving the magnets and my nose - I had made it pretty sore myself," he said. Reardon took a photo of the medical report, which states that he had denied there were any further magnets up his nose. "In the end, two doctors pulled at them - one grabbing at the magnets in each nostril." "The staff enjoyed it - several doctors and some nurses came to laugh at/with me," said Reardon. He said he spent about an hour there, describing the facility as "pretty quiet," as coronavirus patients are being sent to another hospital. Unable to remove them by himself, Reardon ended up heading to the local hospital. "They all pinched together and the ones on my septum got stuck!" "The problem was when I put magnets in my other nostril," he said. First my ear lobes, then my nostrils - like a magnetic piercing."Īt that point, Reardon had only gained himself some temporary body modifications, but things were about to get slightly more permanent. "Then I started mindlessly placing the magnets on my face.
"I had a laugh and gave up temporarily," he added.