You are missing the point.
What startraveler and I are saying is that the old program was applied so guests like us with a genuine need (mobility disabilities that prohibit transfer or make theme severe hardships as in having people lift them into vehicles) and limited resources to accommodate that need had an equal experience to those with no special need at all
That's exactly why I was instructed by CMs to even ask for a GAC so they could more readily accommodate me. I had thought the program was meant only for those with non-physical needs or hidden disabilities. Having a wheelchair of your own, even an expensive power wheelchair and a visible disability that screams inability to transfer was not enough to signify the need for help. Unless you had the card in addition you were not helped.
Honestly, I'm not entirely sure that
was the originial intention of the GAC system. Now, the start of the GAC program was before my time, so I don't have first-hand knowledge of its origins, but this is how it has been explained to me by a handful of seasoned cast and leaders:
Originally, those who had mobility issues were supposed to be given the wheelchair stamp GAC only, while those whose disabilities were more mental than physical (or at least, not related to standing, stairs, and whatnot) were the only ones to be given the Alternate Entrance stamp. MK and DHS eventually stopped handing out wheelchair-stamp-only cards because the higher-ups of those particular parks were tired of guests complaining that
their card didn't let them go through the FP lines like the cards of others did (this is where much of the abuse got out of hand, since anyone who so much as complained of a sore elbow got an Alternate Entrance GAC at those parks since denying them a GAC can be construed as denying them accommodation and accessibility). As for DAK and Epcot, the wheelchair stamp is still rarely given out, only because the moment those guests are directed to the Standby line thinking they just got their "magic pass," they just go right back to GR, throw a hissy fit, and almost always get their Alternate Entrance stamped GAC. I've seen it waaaay too often. So even at those two parks, wheelchair GACs are almost never handed out, because it's just not worth the inevitable fight with the guest in the future.
So when CMs see a guest like you who has a genuine, obvious disability, they're probably more likely to give you the Alternate Entrance stamp (even though, by strict definition of the stamp per the program, that's not the one you "need") simply because so many people who don't ACTUALLY need it get it so easily by just saying a few key words, that it seems unfair to deny you that same level of accommodation when you so clearly are not one who is abusing/scamming the system.
The sad thing is that guests like you might be hurt by this new DAS program compared to the current GAC system (I only say "might" because I want to wait to see how the DAS works in practice before making too many assumptions, so do report back to us with your experience next week)! However, it does seem like they are trying to run it more closely to how the GACs were
originally intended to be run. Just my two cents. Hopefully someone here can correct me if I'm wrong on any of this!