Oxidation remains a bit of a mystery to me. Experience suggests that naturally carbonated beers resist it much more successfully than force carbonated beers. I am a rudimentary type of brewer, big pan, bag, bucket, bottles. No closed transfer, pressure fermenting etc. Its all beyond me.
In fact I do the unthinkable and fill bottles with a jug. I did use a bottling stick for a while but got fed up with it. So my beer must be oxidised surely. Well, not to an extent that adversely affects my pleasure. And probably not much at all. I only once entered a competition and my beer placed second out of 20+.
One judge's score sheet remarked that there was no oxidation in my beer and this was unusual in their experience if judging home brew. The judge was the quality control person for one of England's top rated breweries. I spoke to her after and didn't dare tell her about my technique. She told me she thought my beer was the clear winner, and should have won. It was good for my confidence cos I don't feel confident about my brewing, given how non technical it is.
How can such rudimentary technique produce an apparently oxygen free beer? It had been bottled, in glass, for approx 3 months. I don't use PET cos they lose carbonation, if nothing else.
I prefer naturally carbonated beers to force carbonated. It's also virtually free CO2. It reduces oxygen risk too, and the need for additional equipment and the transporting around the nation of huge amounts of gas in tanks.