48Rob wrote:I would also suggest that anyone who feels a need to do "payback" by creating a louder noise, etc, needs to re read the quote above, and consider which category they really want to be in.
If there is a problem, deal with the problem, don't create yet another problem.

working on it wrote: ...I have been known to escalate in retaliation. At least I used to....
You would have had a different viewpoint, if you had been there, at the dragstrip "payback" incident. We were there to race, and everyone had one or more generators, compressors, air tools in use at one time or another. All serious folk, there for a serious purpose (racing is expensive, and time consuming, and when you're actively pursuing a goal - to win-,it's a serious matter). The instigators of the noise pollution were indifferent to the racing action (street car yahoos at best), and only there to be seen, and drink too much (we made sure that the
one serious guy in their crowd, intent on racing like my team, did not partake alcohol, at least to our knowledge). We had too much equipment, and personnel, to be able to move away, nor the desire to either. So, rather than a face to face confrontation -several of us had already asked them to "get with the program", to no avail- I moved my
already in operation equipment to create a wall of sound between us. Not really payback, but in following years, that group never bothered us again. I'm older now, but still can get aggravated by other people putting their interests above all others, but, I try to accept that to a certain extent. But, I'm out there camping now, not racing to win, and can be more laid-back. At Dinosaur Valley SP last year, there were dozens of kids running amok (a church group camping next to me) until after 10pm. I understood their youthful exuberance; I withdrew into my trailer, put in my earbuds, turned on the MP3 and A/C, and all was OK. Different time, place, reaction to a problem.
Never judge a man until you've walked a mile in his shoes.