Yes, things should be more fair. Is that bad? Because that sounds great to me.
It's not like people who have done WDW many times would suddenly *not* have advantages if these windows, etc. were to suddenly go away forever or change.
If you walk in blind as is, you are at a huge disadvantage. At such a huge disadvantage that I couldn't 100% blame them if they never wanted to come back again. No othe major theme park I've been to, Disney or otherwise, puts you at such a disadvantage as WDW does. If you feel sufficiently disadvantaged, why would you pay such high prices to do it again but "correctly" this time?
It's a big theme park complex. Bigger and more complex than others, yes, but still a big theme park complex.
I reject the notion that because it's been this way for awhile that it's fine. Why is there so much planning? Not really because it's a better experience or to give the savvier consumers a leg up. Because Disney has a financial incentive to do so. And why wouldn't they? So many people just lap it up and never seem to question it. No other park, Disney or otherwise, requires so much planning. And at a certain point, I have to wonder if it's really benefitting me anymore. Is it really fine for WDW just because it's bigger? It's not as if the rest of the world's theme parks are inherently inferior places that have nothing going for them whatsoever.
Do they though?
Most people I know put literally zero thought into going to theme parks. The idea that they need to plan for a park at all is a foreign concept. For most people it's basically this: Parks have rides. Rides are fun. I want to go on rides. Sounds like a fun day! This is not to demean those people-plenty of them are quite intelligent when it comes to other things in life. But I've yet to meet someone who has ever deduced for themselves that they should think about planning a park visit, anywhere. I've always had to tell them. People *know* I know a lot about the parks, but I am seldom asked for advice. Why? It simply never occurs to them that they would need to ask advice to do something as seemingly simple as going to a theme park.
This is where most people are. They assume, rightly or wrongly, they should have a reasonable expectation of entering a park and being able to do everything they want to do. Especially since that's still basically possible at, say, Disneyland and Universal Orlando unless they're coming during a crazy holiday period.
And this site isn't really that representative of the general populace's take on this issue. Maybe I'm not looking in the right forums, but I see very few people in here trying to make sense of their first trip ever. Most people on forums like these are veterans who have done this time and time again, know the system, know the tricks. That's NOT generally going to be the view of someone trying to make sense of this as a first timer.
Should people use the resources they have to make more informed decisions and plan for their trips? Absolutely. Is all of this as necessary as many people here think or as coherent to a first timer as people assume? I'd say no.