I did Year 12 (Senior in US terms) Legal Studies. Whilst I normally wouldn't offer that as relevant to ANYTHING, the basics about how laws are formed and why is covered in about Year 8. This is neither tricky nor controversial. But for what it's worth, Oldbadger's point is entirely correct.
Of course it does. Did I claim it doesn't? You're the one who suggested laws form morals. Laws of the land are consistent, although they are not static.
Hard to respond to this, as I have no idea what you're talking about. In legal terms, near as I can tell, it's not illegal to take photos of children in a park in my country. If you stalk one child, or if you target that child in certain ways (eg. upskirts) then that changes.
From a moral point of view, my opinion is that taking photos of kids to go home and wank to is immoral.
At no time have I advocated cutting anything off anyone, and neither does an argument that I have further your position that laws inform morals.
The moral position of an individual is completely irrelevant to whether laws inform morals or morals inform laws. I could suggest you should be free to take upskirts of kids, or I could say that all cameras should be banned from public areas. These are moral positions which don't refer to the law, and are not legal positions.
At this point, I'm completely lost as to what you're trying to argue, apart from taking what you seem to think is a contrary position.
Anyhow, in case you actually believe laws form morals, I thought I'd link to some references for you. I'm hoping you invest some time and read/respond, but despite calling on me to 'bother asking a practitioner', I see no evidence of investment in your position by you. I sincerely hope I'm misreading that.
Five Major Reasons Why Laws Exist in Society
Note : Identifies 'morality' as one of five drivers behind law creation.
Philosophy of law - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Note : Good old Wikipedia identifies some of the major schools of thought as they relate to the law. Which represents your position?
And finally, consider some of these old UK laws...in each case,
Ordinance for Abolishing of Festivals, 1647
(Effectively a ban on Christmas celebrations enacted by Puritans under Cromwell.
Metropolitan Police Act 1839, Section 54, Sub-section 17
Every person who shall fly any kite or play at any game to the annoyance of the inhabitants or passengers, or who shall make or use any slide upon ice or snow in any street or other thoroughfare, to the common danger of the passengers.
As recently as 2012 it was technically legal to shoot a Scotsman in York if they were carrying a longbow. Whilst this is obviously archaic leftovers, it speaks to the point that LAWS DON'T INFORM MORALS.