And with all due respect, THIS is when we start to pull stuff out of our hoo-ha's to back up our point.
A women who has had the experience as you describe is not going to be frightened by a 'little boy' in a restroom with his mother. Unless a little boy was the attacker? What do you think? Likely?
And if a teenager had to ask Mom for assistance, for whatever the reason, she is not likely to be screaming over the stall and/or opening the door with her drawers down. Heck, even if a litle boy did somehow overhear her say 'I need a tampon', the kid wouldn't know what the heck she was talking about.
You are acting like these 'little boys' of these women who have described taking their 8/9 yo kids in (again, NOT me) are going to be walking around the bathroom, up and down the aisle, peeking in the stalls, gigling like toddlers. Please. What kind of 8/9 yo do you know? You are right in one regard, most are not going to be happy to be in there. They will feel funny and out of place. Probably more so than you. And what does that mean? It means they are going to try to be invisible and pray that Mom hurries the heck up.
And people have labeled these moms overprotective and paranoid? Now who is acting a wee bit overprotective and paranoid?
If it makes you uncomfortable for whatever reason, that's fine. I don't understand it, no matter how you might like to justify it, but I'll respect it because that's how 'you feel'. Just please don't put out these crazy examples to try and imply that I'm the one who's being so very unreasonable. The 'other side' has been ridiculed outright for using what some have dubbed extreme examples to defend their position. It really ought to go both ways.
And for the last time.....remember, I don't bring my boys into the ladies room with me