Dear Matt,
George has the thinnest hide on earth when it comes to politics, so if I were you, I'd just put him on your ignore lists, as I have. Usually, if I make the mistake of checking one of his posts, I am reminded why I did this.
A good way to perform a reality check on laws and attitudes is to look at what happens in other countries (and indeed, at other times) where things are more relaxed.
For example, few if any other countries have the American law that everything stops for school buses. Do we see heaps of dead and dying children in the gutter in other countries? If not, perhaps the law is unnecessary.
Likewise, parking motorcycles on the pavement (or to use the more logical American term, sidewalk) is illegal in England. One case, as far as I recall, suggests that this is to stop blind people falling over them. As I have yet to trip over a blind man on his back, feebly waving his arms and legs after tripping over a motorcycle on the sidewalk, even in Paris, the risk may be overrated.
Thirty years ago, in England, no-one thought twice about photographing children playing in the streets, or on the beach. I assume it was the same in the USA. What were the problems this caused?
George accuses me of trying to twist all this into a political statement. Well, if he doesn't like the truth -- a simple observation of what I and many other photographers know to be true -- then he's the twister, and he's the one with the political agenda, not I. He is suffering, though he will almost certainly loathe the term being applied to him, from political correctness: HIS politics.
This paranoia about photographing children is recent, and localized. Time will tell whether it's going to spread, or whether the boil will be lanced.
Several responsible bodies including the RSA have already raised concerns about the over-protection of children, which inhibits their socialization and acquisition of skills, and my own belief (or at least hope) is that reason will prevail.
Cheers,
Roger