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Just repeatedly attack their locks with superglue.

Any and all locks.

A glued lock is absolutely demoralising. You need to remove and replace the lock; cleaning solvents wont do a good enough job to properly free all the pins/mechanisms. Lock protectors get glued too lol. Nothing is safe from sticky bandits. It only takes a squirt or two... And it is very easy + legal to carry a tiny tube everywhere.

I'm not condoning this lightly, I am respectful of property and hard work of others and all that... I'm providing a real strategy to replace the questionable ideas I see scattered around with something that is low risk and highly effective.

P.S. be aware of cameras. Hide your identity, distort your body size, alter your gait.

Just repeatedly attack their locks with superglue. Any and all locks. A glued lock is absolutely demoralising. You need to remove and replace the lock; cleaning solvents wont do a good enough job to properly free all the pins/mechanisms. Lock protectors get glued too lol. Nothing is safe from sticky bandits. It only takes a squirt or two... And it is very easy + legal to carry a tiny tube everywhere. I'm not condoning this lightly, I am respectful of property and hard work of others and all that... I'm providing a real strategy to replace the questionable ideas I see scattered around with something that is low risk and highly effective. P.S. be aware of cameras. Hide your identity, distort your body size, alter your gait.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

What you're describing is known as oxygen toxicity.

100% oxygen can be tolerated at sea level for about 24–48 hours without any serious tissue damage. Longer exposures produce definite tissue injury. Oxygen at 2 ATA produces characteristic pulmonary signs and symptoms beginning with mild carinal irritation on deep inspiration 3–6 hours into the exposure, intense carinal irritation an uncontrolled cough after about 10 hours and finally chest pain and dyspnoea. Symptoms subside 4 hours after cessation of exposure in majority of patients

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4925834/

That doesn't mean I recommend breathing pure O2 for 23 hours. But a few minutes will not hurt you.