I know all of these stories are anecdotal, but it does point to the fact that it's not just the "Disney naysayers" who have issues with MM+. I actually didn't have any major issues with it in October (although I don't like the concept on principle), but I feel like I had enough lead time to understand how to use it properly. Imagine the people planning their once-in-a-lifetime trip trying to figure out all the things the hoops they need to jump through just to make their trip go smoothly. I would hate to be in the shoes of someone planning their first WDW vacation right now.
That's the irony here. What was one of the biggest guest complaints to begin with? How complicated the entire endeavor of a Disney vacation was - which required 400-page guide books and dozens of hours of internet research. And what is the solution? Why, let's make it more complicated, and ADD technology to the mix! Beautiful!
The difference now is, the varying levels of knowledge are excruciatingly obvious to park guests. I never had sympathy for folks who didn't get FP to begin with - read the one page summary in the guide page, it even has cute little animal pictures to show you how. If you didn't get that, you probably miss a lot in life. I always laughed at those who gave folks in the FP line dirty looks - dude, everyone has the same chance. Think ahead a tiny bit.
Aside from that, however, most stuff wasn't obvious and "in your face" that required a lot of advance planning. EMH was, but also understandable and clear. That was really the extend of the "Caste" system (and in most cases EMH is to be avoided anyway, so they are actually doing you a favor). I'm sure lots of folks don't even know Cindy has a breakfast. Regardless, unless you were paying for a Disney guide, pretty much everything was an open playing field when it came to attractions.
Now, not only is that not the case (if you have the magical bracelet, you are a
potential winner) but even if you are one of the lucky ones, you still have to win the Internet game of making ride reservations before hand, if you consider boxing yourself into certain parks/attractions on certain days or losing the benefit completely to be "winning". (Maybe the sad, pathetic Charlie Sheen version of "Winning?").
It's almost comical - the biggest semi-legitimate complaint of FP to begin with was that "I don't want to plan that far ahead of my day" - it's like they sat there and said, "Oh yeah? You think that's bad? Here, make your ride reservations THREE MONTHS in advance, when you don't know what the weather will be like, or crowds, or anything else - for a five minute ride - that'll teach them! BWHAHAHAHA!"