The over excitement, foaming at the mouth and rabid faith on the medium sound to me like over compensation. These folks are actually terribly insecure about their work and what they do, and by convincing themselves they're riding the top of the waves they are simply trying to drown their anxiety.
Professionals don't do these things. That impatience and ferocity are the sign of the new convert.
However, I wonder if, as Peter says, their attitude would change if you mentioned a Leica...
Funny... a while ago, Popular Photography published an interesting editorial about digital. No, it wasn't a bashing, but a simple truth: the proliferation of systems and software will soon render the formats and media obsolete. It's paradoxical but progress tends to feed on itself, and, just like it happened with computers, the files readable today will be unreadable tomorrow... and the best way to preserve your memories and snapshots will be by simply printing them.
Now, let's see what a digishooter can do with a 256MB card full of shots, a home-office printer and a stack of paper. Can someone "empty-out" the card and print all the photos with the same quality and resolution film prints come from the lab?
Not to run down digital; I realize it's a blessing for those who work against time, like journalists and scientists, but to pretend one system to be ineluctably better than another just because it's newer strikes me as sophomoric, sycophantic and dumb.
But heck... I'm preaching to the choir here!
Only one favor: let's not say we're a dying breed, and neither say that is film dying. Let's remember that film will, from now on, distinguish the artisans (or artists) from the mere practitioner, the same way a fountain pen signals a writer from a pencil pusher.
BTW, who is into fountain pens here?
