Chi84
Premium Member
They’re raising the prices but not everyone believes they’re degrading the product.Stoicism in the face of a company that keeps making choices that make you sad isn't a virtue. This isn't a religion.
Disney's decisions - including the decision that every new attraction has to replace an old one - aren't inevitable. This isn't erosion or the tides. Its a bunch of not particularly bright guys in a room making a decision. They can be persuaded by consumer activity - they're investing now because they're afraid of how EU will change guest behavior.
Not comparing an attraction to what it replaced makes no sense and isn't how folks behave in almost any other branch of life. I believe the consensus here is that most of Disney's replacements have been downgrades. Even the one I champion, MMRR, is controversial. And remember, DISNEY DOESN'T HAVE TO REPLACE ATTRACTIONS TO BUILD NEW ONES. Disneyland, which genuinely DOES have problems with a lack of room for expansion, only lost a BBQ restaurant and half of the Rivers of America to gain SWL and their MMRR was a new build.
Again, if you feel a resort that has been exponentially raising prices (this isn't in dispute) has also been degrading the product, the theory of capitalism says you will register your discontent with your wallet. That's the way the "invisible hand" works, the way companies are supposed to be forced to be responsive.
Change is something that happens everyday, everywhere. Accepting that and moving on isn’t bad consumer behavior if the product is still making you happy.
The alternative is not to visit WDW and some people would be much more saddened by that than by losing an attraction.
People understand what they’re doing even if you don’t like it and wish they would decide otherwise.