• StametsOP
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      1 year ago

      There is an FDA report on it. There is nothing saying that it is a hoax or that it is fake.

      If you’re going to claim something is fake then I highly recommend you actually provide sources to back yourself up instead of this weirdly aggressive accusation based off of, seemingly, literally nothing.

      • @[email protected]
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        481 year ago

        It’s also just not how MRIs work. The magnet is on before the patient is in the room. They would be injured before the scan. The fda incident is likely heating due to eddy currents in non magnetic metal which is more in line with the injuries people sustain with their rings and shit when not removed. Like why induction stove has magnetic interlocks else wedding ring cuts finger off

        • Beefalo
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          161 year ago

          So it’s just another clickable lie, because of course it is, it’s too perfect. I can’t fact-check everything and it’s a bad use of time if I have to.

          I gotta get off of social media entirely, I can work with fiction presented as fiction but it’s just an endless firehose of lies from people who think they have a god-given right to lie as much as they need to, on every platform. The AI thing is just getting started. I lost track of reality several months ago, and that’s not supposed to be some sort of jokey joke.

      • @[email protected]
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        281 year ago

        you can’t prove a negative. How do you prove something didn’t happen.

        Read your own link, no attached image, no mention of internal hemorrhage, no mention of material. The misinformation post might be inspired by this but that image isn’t real.

      • @[email protected]
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        171 year ago

        No snopes says:

        Although we couldn’t determine with certainty whether this claim was accurate/authentic, we observed it had at traits often indicative of misinformation:

        The account itself later referred to the tweet as a “shitpost,” which is a post that is deliberately absurd, provocative, or offensive, according to Merriam-Webster.

        Using the Internet Archive, we found the viral image in a since-deleted Reddit post from April 8, 2023. The post was titled “MRI to CT.” The caption included in the post claimed the patient said they didn’t have metal on them, but that the material inside the butt plug had metal balls.

        The screenshot of the text wasn’t included in the post. We could find no social media posts about the claims that came from anyone with the name mentioned in the text as the lawyer representing the person.

        They further point out the fda report predates that post by 1 day so it could be inspiration for the joke or maybe real but no confirmation and then explain a bit about MRIs.

        So basically they can find no primary sources, lots of evidence of a lie, but no primary source claiming to have made it up.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 year ago

        Increasingly large segments of society are losing their grip on reality. Distinguishing fact from fiction requires practice if it is to work when it matters.

        Just look at OP asking me to prove a negative, something literally impossible.

      • Annoyed_🦀
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        61 year ago

        A lot. Imagine antivax and flatearther use your argument when caught lying.

        • @batmaniam
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          41 year ago

          Man, I could be wrong but I swear the flat earth started as a joke like the whole “birds aren’t real” thing. But it had a more intellectual thought excersizey angle like “tell me why the earth is round”. I know for a fact that’s how my earth science teacher used it getting into how to structure a testable hypothesis and the scientific method. I wonder everytime I see flat earth shit when exactly he had to retire that one. It’s to bad because it was great then.