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Video Goes Viral Of Man “Connecting To Bluetooth” After Received The C19 Vax


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Oh my…..

I’m going to give my standard disclaimer on this one before we get started.

I just report the news, YOU decide what you think of it.

But this is too wild to not share.

Is it true?

The USA Today has already concluded it is most certainly, definitely, we know for suredly, false.  But more on that in a moment.

First I just have to show you this video.

It’s actually two videos combined into one.

This is a man who claims he got the AstraZenica vaccine and that it went “fine” except now whenever he’s near a bluetooth device it tries to connect to him and it’s labeled “AstraZenica”.

This could very well be fake, or it could very well be satire….or if could be true!

Once again, I report….you decide!

After you watch, let me know in the comments section what you think.

Watch it here safely on Rumble:

Is it real?

Fake?

I don’t know, but I know Randy Quaid just posted this:

That’s not weird or anything, right?

As I mentioned, thankfully we have the USA Today who has sent out their most intrepid researchers to already confirm this is 100% most certainly fake, they’re positive of it.

Here’s what they’ve posted:

This unfounded claim is the most recent in a series of falsehoods about vaccines.

Since last summer online proponents have pushed the false conspiracy theory that COVID-19 vaccinations would be used to secretly microchip large populations.

Most recently, the internet has been consumed by false claims that magnets can detect microchips inside vaccinated individuals’ arms. USA TODAY has investigated several of these false claims and found them to be baseless.

How “conspiracy theories” are working against the goal of getting Americans vaccinated for COVID-19.
Bluetooth device names can be changed

The fact that the name appears as AstraZeneca_ChAdOx1-S on devices near the man in the video proves nothing. The names that appear on Bluetooth and Wi-Fi can be easily changed on most devices.

Both Apple and Samsung outline instructions for how to change your device names.

The result shown in the video could be easily faked by renaming any Bluetooth-enabled device “AstraZeneca_ChAdOx1-S” and bringing it in range of the phone and the TV as the camera shows them.

The U.S. has yet to authorize the AstraZeneca COVID vaccine, but it is already in use in other countries. A full list of ingredients in the AstraZeneca vaccine is available online via the United Kingdom government and the University of Oxford.

The list does not include a microchip or any ingredient that would cause the vaccine or vaccine recipient to have Bluetooth connectivity.

USA TODAY also looked at the ingredient lists for the Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson’s Janssen vaccines. There is no evidence to support claims that any of these vaccines contain a microchip or any element that would make it detectable via Bluetooth.

Well there you go!

The’ve told you what you’re supposed to think, now what do YOU think on your own?



 

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