Quote (card_sultan @ Jul 18 2019 12:32pm)
thanks for debunking yourself - However, oxygen itself is extremely reactive with many things, including several gases in the atmosphere so such a container would need to be handled with great care to avoid explosion.
If it "explodes" then it can be used as a fuel.
Gravity is not a force, but you can think of it as a force
A slinky is technically not a spring, but sometimes it acts sorta similar to a spring
A man who puts on a dress and acts like a woman, is not an actual woman
Normal oxygen is not a fuel, but science can manipulate it to act like a fuel
Its so much fun pointing out how you take pop science and twist it in your own misunderstanding.
I didn't debunk myself, you obviously have no idea what the distinction is between flammable and reactive. Something that IS FLAMMABLE is itself capable of catching fire. Oxygen being REACTIVE means it easily helps something THAT IS FLAMMABLE to burst into flames. In that example, it's not a caution that oxygen itself may explode, it is a caution that if the oxygen leaks and comes into contact with something that is already on fire or hot enough to ignite, the leaking oxygen (especially pure O2, like is found in medical supplies everywhere) will REACT with the flammable objects to explode.
Gravity exists, whether it is properly described as a force is a philosophical question.
A slinky is, at ALL TIMES, a spring.