Lubricants Abject Infidelity 2025 Repack: Dipsticks

If you are on a dark web auto forum or a Telegram group for “surplus fluids,” you will still see listings for It is a shibboleth. Only the initiated know that buying “abject infidelity” today means you are purchasing a bottle of actual, high-quality lubricant that has been re-labeled as fake to avoid import taxes—a double bluff.

“Did you use the 2025 repack, son? Did you commit abject infidelity?” dipsticks lubricants abject infidelity 2025 repack

It was meant to be a typo. It became a prophecy. Within 48 hours of the listing going live on a secondary marketplace (January 17, 2026), screenshots of the product page flooded X (formerly Twitter) and the niche forum, MechanicConfessions.org . If you are on a dark web auto

They’ll look at the drained, glittering sludge of failed metal and counterfeit additives, and they’ll ask the only question that matters: Did you commit abject infidelity

Why did it resonate? Because 2025 was a brutal year for car owners. Supply chain issues had led to a 300% increase in counterfeit lubricants. Mechanics reported a new kind of engine failure—not wear and tear, but betrayal . You’d change your oil, trusting the bottle, only to discover you’d poured in a mix of used fryer grease and dye.

By: Alex M. Tanner, Automotive Culture & Digital Anthropology