Hi Nadine and Fred,
Just offering a different perspective here

Whilst I agree that it can be annoying to sit through a meal with a loud, screaming child nearby I would say it totally depends on the individual circumstances and the particular reason why the child was crying! If the child is just plain badly behaved, shouting and screaming continuously in a 'spoilt-brat' kinda fashion (" I want a new toy **NOW**"!!!) with the parents doing nothing to deal with this behaviour well then, yes, having to put up with that would bug the hell out of me.
However, if the child is crying due to perhaps banging his head or some mishap then I'd understand that. Furthermore (and this is the point I am so long-windedly trying to make!) I would add that the child might have special needs, some of which are impossible to detect to an outsider. For example, when my eldest child, who is now almost 11, was 3, he suffered from autism (I say 'suffered' past tense because due to intensive therapy, his symptoms have diluted to the point where he is no longer autistic in a diagnostic sense). Whilst some situations were a total no-no for him, other situations were hard to avoid, for example, trips to restaurants whilst on holidays (we always went self-catering but even so we couldn't *always* eat-in due to scheduling etc).
When choosing a restaurant, we had to do our best to avoid crowds and loud noise as it was too upsetting for him and would bring on violent tantrums so therefore (and ironically) the last places we could choose would be kiddie places because the noise and crowds were bound to be more intense, thereby greatly upsetting him. We would choose quieter, more sedate places with calmer atmospheres. Having done that we would then do all in our power to prevent tantrums but of course, lo and behold, despite our best efforts, something unexpected like a sudden noise, an alarm, an overly-friendly waiter trying to chat to our son or a million other things from the shape of the plate to the strength of the lights in the room might set him off and we're there with a 3 year old screaming on the floor with eye-rolling and tut-tutting in abundence from neighbouring tables!!! Now, we would then try to depart as quickly as possible having packed up our food and tended to our other still-hungry baby (now 8).
An exaggurated likelihood I know but I guess my main point is that it truly depends on the reason behind the tantrum and that's not always evident. But I know I have been judged often during our then occasional restaurant trips, walking down the street (with screaming son lying on ground having meltdown!) and almost anywhere else you care to think of!! People do sometimes jump to the worst possible conclusion i.e. "that child is a brat" as opposed to "perhaps that child has special needs".
Please don't think I'm saying that you are jumping to the wrong conclusion. I'm just putting a different perspective out there
