Experiment 104: Metal Zipper Interaction with the Spectrum
In 2022, I got curious, due to being sensitized to EMF fields ,graphene oxide+EMF will do this insitu, about metal zipper blue jean interaction with the electromagnetic spectrum and the implications.
Here is a basic question? Does your metal zipper on jeans, pants, shorts, jackets, etc. now interact directly with the spectrum
Answer: You bet it does.
Why? Think of the zipper as a bunch of antennas that receive electromagnetic energy and create a magnetic field around the zipper rungs (hundreds of them) that then interact with your biological cells. Why are guys having sperm die? Why are women having cysts in ovaries? The zipper is the culprit when combined with the electromagnetic spectrum.
Here are the calculations and then experimental data (will publish this later in 2024).
To prove interaction, you simply measure the metal zipper length and then calculate the wavelength range that can interact with it and then identify the electromagnetic spectrum bands that fall within the interaction range. Then you look at all the devices that people have around them and on them to figure out the reason why an EMF field interaction exists. Keep in mind Saudi Arabia has a huge investment fund allocated to non-metallics (cause they can sell more oil petrochemical products to people still living, that don’t have metal on their bodies that interacts with the EMF spectrum).
"Microwaves have wavelengths ranging between about 1 mm and 30 cm." 1–300 GHz [1, 2]
Therefore, since a zipper rung length is between the range 1 mm and 30 cm, microwaves from your smart phone directly interact with the zipper.
People have been posting about sterility and cancers around testicles and ovaries. This is a no brainer, if you’re aware of four items:
Balls (testicles) or Ovaries
Metal Zippers that interact with microwaves given their length between 0.2 cm and 1 cm on-average.
Smart phones that people carry on their body
The fact that smart phones operate within the microwave spectrum
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to Brandon’s Substack to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.