I would venture to say that in the vast majority of instances the way a person reacts to loud music depends on what type of music the person listens to.03Lightningrocks wrote:jmra wrote:plenty of gas stations down the road.Right2Carry wrote:No doubt Dunn did several things wrong the first being he engaged the kids over loud music.apostate wrote:It's possible but in returning guilty verdicts for attempted murder, the jurors unanimously said that, based on the evidence they saw and heard, there was no (reasonable) doubt in their minds (1) Dunn wasn't threatened with a gun by the occupants of the other vehicle and (2) Dunn was trying to kill the guys in the other vehicle, not hurt or scare them.Right2Carry wrote:Didn't the car with the youths drive off? Is it possible that a gun was in the vehicle and was disposed of before the police were able to search the vehicle?
I will add my thoughts. Teens have been playing loud music in their cars as far back as there have been radios in cars. Heck, we use to do it. Even funnier, I still do on occasion. I would never get home if I took the time to give grief to the occupants of every car I pass with loud music playing. At times, it seems like every light I get stuck at has someone playing their boom ti boom bass loud enough that I can feel it in my legs. I just blow it off. Loud music and teens are on my long long list of "who cares?".
Did I mention the time Mrs Anygun and I were in La Grange walkiing towards the front door of the HEB? We heard loud country music (Dwight Yoakam, to be exact) blasting behind us. We turned to look at the vehicle as it passed. It was a chevy pickup, windows down. The driver was a black gentleman sporting dreadlocks. We stopped, looked at each other, laughed heartily. Where was the Bob Marley tune?
Anygunanywhere