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End your pain with a Jesus Bracelet

Skwim

Veteran Member
"Combines the Most Powerful Forces of Heaven and Earth"


jesus-bracelet-605x831.jpg

What more can a guy say than, "WOW!!!


Now all I have to do is raise $9.97
 

Thana

Lady
They're marketing to Christians. Big whoop?

I just found a Medicine Buddha Healing Power Tassel, That's literally what it's called.
I mean atleast with the bracelet they're claiming it's the magnets that do something but the tassel is just a tassel. Also it's more expensive at $10.88
 

Ultimatum

Classical Liberal
I bet the scientist that created this product in a laboratory in Switzerland over a couple of years can also prove why the THEORY of Evolution is false using science!
 

Nietzsche

The Last Prussian
Premium Member
...

As someone in constant, unending pain, I hope the people responsible for this die in a car-fire.
 

Skwim

Veteran Member
Moreover, while copper will interact with a magnetic field, copper itself is not magnetic or at most, only weakly magnetic.
 

Wirey

Fartist
Moreover, while copper will interact with a magnetic field, copper itself is not magnetic or at most, only weakly magnetic.

Copper is completely non-magnetic. The only materials on earth capable of storing a magnetic field are nickel, iron, and cobalt. Induced magnetic fields caused by exposure to expanding and contracting magnetic fields of flux are merely channeled through non-magnetic metals. There is a school of thought that suggess Californium may be magnetic, but it has not been conclusively proved as the ionizing nature of the isotopes of the element (particularly Californium-251) tend to interfere with the measurement of lines of magnetic flux.

That said, the use of copper jewelery as a method of pain relief has a fairly extensive history. There's no science behind it, but the general belief in it could help enhance the placebo effect.
 

Skwim

Veteran Member
Copper is completely non-magnetic. The only materials on earth capable of storing a magnetic field are nickel, iron, and cobalt. Induced magnetic fields caused by exposure to expanding and contracting magnetic fields of flux are merely channeled through non-magnetic metals. There is a school of thought that suggess Californium may be magnetic, but it has not been conclusively proved as the ionizing nature of the isotopes of the element (particularly Californium-251) tend to interfere with the measurement of lines of magnetic flux.

That said, the use of copper jewelery as a method of pain relief has a fairly extensive history. There's no science behind it, but the general belief in it could help enhance the placebo effect.

If you have a strong enough magnetic field all matter is magnetic. But copper is so weakly magnetic that we can't observe it without very, very large magnetic fields. So the short answer is "No, copper isn’t magnetic." This can quickly be tested by trying to pick up a penny with a magnet.


Magnetism and electricity are closely related. When a magnet moves near copper (or other metals) it sets up electrical eddy currents.

The eddy currents will repel the magnet as it falls down the copper tube. This repulsion pushes against the magnet and slows it down. In the video you can see that the magnet appears to float through the tube.

So, Is Copper Magnetic?

The answer is that copper itself is not magnetic or is only slightly magnetic (not big enough to see under normal situations). But it does interact with magnets and that's pretty important. It is this interaction with magnets that power plants use to generate the electricity we use every day. It also makes for a very, very impressive demonstration.
source

________________________________________________________

Magnetic Materials List
In general, metals like iron, chromium, aluminum, uranium, platinum, copper, cobalt and nickel are magnetic in nature. Their metallic compounds and alloys with various metals are also magnetic in nature.
source

_____________________________________________

Although copper is only weakly diamagnetic it requires 0.8 or 0.9 percent nickel to neutralize this diamagnetic effect . . . .
source

Diamagnetic materials create an induced magnetic field in a direction opposite to an externally applied magnetic field, and are repelled by the applied magnetic field.
Source:Wikipeda
 

Wirey

Fartist
I'm an electrical engineer, but thanks. Copper is not considered a magnetic material for electrical purposes, and since nothing else matters, it's not magnetic. So nyah.
 
Last edited:

ShivaFan

Satyameva Jayate
Premium Member
Not sure what the big deal or outrage et all of this is, their catalog sells everything from "Wish Pearls" to these type of bracelets to even acupuncture ("acupressure") rings with little like spikes inside the inner rim of the ring that poke you, to lucky.four leaf clover jewelry and other junk such as gloves that are supposed to cure arthritis and just place fake jewelry to you name it. They are an equal opportunity distribution house of such "magic medicine" and it has nothing to do with any particular religion unless you want to consider totem magic a religion. Check out the acupressure ring...

Therapeutic Acupressure Ring

Availability: In stock

$4.99
ACUPRESSURE PAIN RELIEF!

Now you don’t need to see an acupressure specialist to experience this ancient Oriental wonder of fast, safe, natural pain relief – throughout your entire body! Wear the Miracle Acupressure Ring on any finger. Gently twist and roll up and down to stimulate acupressure points that help circulation, restore health, relieve pain, boost your metabolism and target parts of your body.
 

ShivaFan

Satyameva Jayate
Premium Member
As far as curing things or magic and such via charms or totems, the human mind may have more ability to self-heal (or self-select for destruction) than some imagine, and there might be something to collective consciousness. The placebo effect may be more than some assume.

When I was a little kid, girls use to make me sit on a "throne" in someone's front lawn (could be a bucket turned over or an old wood chair), they would put a big white bath towel over my shoulders as a robe, spend about an hour wetting my hair and then combing it into "hair styles" and then finally they would take an empty coffee can and flip it upside down to crown me, or use a pot as my crown and a part of a lamp rod with decor on it as my "wand". One girl fell off a bike nearby, crying they took her to me to "cure her" and, lo and behold, I waved the wand while in my crown and the crying stopped and all her pain was gone.

The mind can envision things perhaps into semi-reality. For example, with the same girls in a garage, I would turn the lights off and then say, "here spider, spider, spider! Heeeere spider, spider, spider!"... they would all start screaming in high pitched voices, and afterwards many would swear up and down they saw the spider.

hmmmm....
 

oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
"Combines the Most Powerful Forces of Heaven and Earth"


jesus-bracelet-605x831.jpg

What more can a guy say than, "WOW!!!


Now all I have to do is raise $9.97

QUESTIONS:-
What is the postage to Oldbadger's mound, Kentistan?
What is the seller's feedback rating?
Do these bracelets help old men? You know......
 

oldbadger

Skanky Old Mongrel!
If you have a strong enough magnetic field all matter is magnetic. But copper is so weakly magnetic that we can't observe it without very, very large magnetic fields. So the short answer is "No, copper isn’t magnetic." This can quickly be tested by trying to pick up a penny with a magnet.


Magnetism and electricity are closely related. When a magnet moves near copper (or other metals) it sets up electrical eddy currents.

The eddy currents will repel the magnet as it falls down the copper tube. This repulsion pushes against the magnet and slows it down. In the video you can see that the magnet appears to float through the tube.

So, Is Copper Magnetic?

The answer is that copper itself is not magnetic or is only slightly magnetic (not big enough to see under normal situations). But it does interact with magnets and that's pretty important. It is this interaction with magnets that power plants use to generate the electricity we use every day. It also makes for a very, very impressive demonstration.
source

________________________________________________________

Magnetic Materials List
In general, metals like iron, chromium, aluminum, uranium, platinum, copper, cobalt and nickel are magnetic in nature. Their metallic compounds and alloys with various metals are also magnetic in nature.
source

_____________________________________________

Although copper is only weakly diamagnetic it requires 0.8 or 0.9 percent nickel to neutralize this diamagnetic effect . . . .
source

Diamagnetic materials create an induced magnetic field in a direction opposite to an externally applied magnetic field, and are repelled by the applied magnetic field.
Source:Wikipeda

That is the most interesting post and vid I've seen in many weeks. I've got several of those magnets so will be trying to copy that demonstration.
Excellent!
 

Ingledsva

HEATHEN ALASKAN
Think cannabis holy anointing oil made correctly; would heal far more, as science now confirms. :innocent:

Yep, I've written about this a couple of times here.

The Hebrew dictionary does say it is Cannabis.

"The word translated as "sweet calamus" QaNeH-BoSheM more appropriately translates "Cannabis"...
"KINEBOISIN, according to the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, is the old name for cannabis -- it was also spelt 'kannabosm'. They claim it was mis-translated in the King James' version of the bible, as 'calamus'."

There were 6 Pounds of cannabis (Marijuana) boiled into one gallon of Olive oil. :D

They also used magic mushrooms, and a kind of hallucinogenic snail.

*
 
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