First, we all agree that camera gear has NOTHING to do with whether or not a photographer is a pro. A pro photographer might use anything he has on hand.
Well, just like when I go to a dentist for a cleaning, I would expect that he use equipment better than the toothbrush that I use at home, for a cleaning.
When someone says the word "pro", to me it means that there is a
knowledgeable person using
higher than average quality equipment to give me results
better than I could ever do myself. If all it took was equipment, I could purchase that high-end tooth brush and bypass all the exorbitant fees that this "pro" is charging me. To me, it is a combination of the 2 things... equipment, and skills/experience. Experience, knowledge and results are what people should pay for... not because someone tacked on a meaningless three letter title to their shirt and struts around with something big and impressive hanging from their neck.
And second, professional gear has nothing to do with COST. Yes... it nearly always costs more, but that's not what makes it pro gear.
Yes, pro gear is pro because the optics are better, the lenses are faster, the cameras are sturdier, weather sealed, consistent, have less noise, shoot faster, and so on and so forth. There are easily visible and definable reasons why pro equipment is valuable and why it costs more.
I am seeing not a "thing" against legitimate professional photographers, but what I do see relatively often is people with little to no experience, little to no knowledge... turning pro. They go out there and are charging for services they cannot deliver and have not even begun to pay their dues to have earned the right to be called a pro. It is not so much the term "pro" as it is what negative connotations these people are pushing to the industry image of what a pro is. They have little concept of what pros
should be like, much less be one themselves. This is the kind of person representing you out there in the real world. Uncle Bob with the dSLR at the wedding standing in your way, the 16-year old with an XTi for 2 weeks getting $50 for shooting a wedding. The nice lady with good equipment, but no clue where the on button is charging for child and family portraiture. All these people out there with business cards and a website, but missing the essential ingredient...
skill, these are the people out there representing themselves as someone of
your caliber.
This hurts the people who have dedicated the time, and have made a tremendous effort to perfect their craft so that they can deliver a superior result. The end result is a bit of sourness in the general public that you see here and there and it comes out as what you mistakenly feel as a negative feeling against pros, Pete.
In truth, it is less about having bad feelings about pros and more about some negativity the
wanna-be pros are out there generating in the industry. The main reason is that the public at a glance has no way of discerning a true from a fake, or do not take the proper precautions, fall prey to the situation and now generalize that all pros suck.
That's some pretty heavy damage happening out there, and unfortunately, the ones getting hurt the most, are the ones that really put in the effort to get to where they are in the first place.