Visitor dies after riding Star Tours

Hakunamatata

Le Meh
Premium Member
I know Im going to hell for thinking this, but the second thing that went through my mind after feeling sorrow for the man and any family he was with....

...was whether he was the rebel spy?
Omg. I thought the same thing. The shock of being outed was too much for him.
 

AEfx

Well-Known Member
Sad. A man died a month ago on Star Tours and it's just now news.

Disney obviously still has a tight grip and control on "events" when it has the opportunity.

It's a quarterly report. It just so happened this one happened a month ago.

The ride didn't malfunction. There was no danger to other guests. Disney was not negligent. These types of things just happen. Some people have a heart attack at the grocery store parking lot. I doubt the grocery store goes out of its way to promote that.
 

Master Yoda

Pro Star Wars geek.
Premium Member
Lazyboy97o,
Hence the word unofficial. It is common knowledge and was practiced for decades. Go back to sleep. Sometimes the truth is hard to find when you govern your own empire (RCID), control your own media (ABC) and have the Neverland Boyz piling in (WDWM).
You might want to hurry, there is only one left in stock.

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jakeman

Well-Known Member
Lazyboy97o,
Hence the word unofficial. It is common knowledge and was practiced for decades. Go back to sleep. Sometimes the truth is hard to find when you govern your own empire (RCID), control your own media (ABC) and have the Neverland Boyz piling in (WDWM).
Wait...are you saying this website is part of the conspiracy? Because I got a handful of posters and about 12 threads worth of post that would say otherwise.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
Maybe you should read more than a headline. The death is known because it was self-reported by Disney to the State of Florida as a theme park related incident.
Of course it was related, it happened in a theme park. Even Disney with all there magic cannot know that the ride did him in which is what everyone is implying. I'm sure it didn't help, but, think for a minute how much liability that would open Disney up for if they were to admit that a ride killed someone. No, all they are saying is he was pronounced dead in a theme park, they certainly would not take responsibility for it. When was the last time Disney ever said they were "at fault" for any bad thing happening. It has always been a court that made that determination.
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
Of course it was related, it happened in a theme park. Even Disney with all there magic cannot know that the ride did him in which is what everyone is implying. I'm sure it didn't help, but, think for a minute how much liability that would open Disney up for if they were to admit that a ride killed someone. No, all they are saying is he was pronounced dead in a theme park, they certainly would not take responsibility for it. When was the last time Disney ever said they were "at fault" for any bad thing happening. It has always been a court that made that determination.
Deaths are declared by a doctor at a hospital. He died afterwards outside the park. You complain about wild speculation but refuse to actually look at and understand a very simple report.
 

Goofyque'

Well-Known Member
I think it is all very sad for the family. Having said that, the man's medical history makes it just as likely that he could have passed while riding the carousel or It's a Small World. Reports included all deaths with 24 hours at a number of theme parks, ride related or not. If I die at WDW, my family has instructions to take the Magic band from my cold dead wrist, use the FP+ and not miss an ADR. I was where I wanted to be, doing what I wanted to do.
 

Ralphlaw

Well-Known Member
The problem is that those warnings are so pervasive that most people ignore them, and many healthy people would perhaps be included in them. Everyone has had some health problem. I went to the ER eight years ago with a hearth rhythm problem. I cut down on caffeine, upped my exercise, and never had another episode. Does that mean I shouldn't ride Star Tours? Of course not. The only rides that messed with me at all were Space Mountain at Disneyland Paris and the Teacups, which didn't stress my heart at all, just my stomach and semi-circular canals.

I would hazard to guess that reading every single warning word for word at WDW would take hours, if not days. For sanity and time sake, we ignore them. Does anyone actually read all the junk that comes with your phone bill, credit card bill, or utility bill? Of course not. None of us would waste that time. We have better things to do. Similarly, none of us can be expected to read all the warnings at Disney.

Right now, I am 51 years old, 6'0", 225 pounds, have a stressful job, and I once went to the ER with a heart rhythm anomaly. If I died after riding Small World, they would write up that a middle aged stress out overweight man with a history of heart disease died on Disney's tamest attraction. Call OSHA. Convene Congress for an investigation. Field the solicitation letters from law firms. If all of us with health problems shunned the rides with overly inclusive warnings, they would be half full, at best.

The poor man died because his time was up. Not a bad way to end our time on earth. He, like the rest of us, had health issues and was imperfect. Let's just pray that the family is managing it well, and that the man had his business straight with God.
 

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
Deaths are declared by a doctor at a hospital. He died afterwards outside the park. You complain about wild speculation but refuse to actually look at and understand a very simple report.
That's a different argument. You are saying that they admitted that he died ON (or because of) THE RIDE. I am saying, contrary to what others believe, that all they admitted was that he died while in the theme park. There is a huge difference that apparently some other agenda wants to prove to be important to make people believe. Not the same discussion.
 

Santa Raccoon 77

Thank you sir. You were an inspiration.
Premium Member
That's a different argument. You are saying that they admitted that he died ON (or because of) THE RIDE. I am saying, contrary to what others believe, that all they admitted was that he died while in the theme park. There is a huge difference that apparently some other agenda wants to prove to be important to make people believe. Not the same discussion.
Did they actually say he died in the park or just he fell sick after riding and died later ( maybe in the park maybe not )
 

lazyboy97o

Well-Known Member
That's a different argument. You are saying that they admitted that he died ON (or because of) THE RIDE. I am saying, contrary to what others believe, that all they admitted was that he died while in the theme park. There is a huge difference that apparently some other agenda wants to prove to be important to make people believe. Not the same discussion.
Seriously, how hard is it to read one brief little description? You're just ranting when you have absolutely no clue what you are talking about. There is nothing that says he died at the park nor is the report limited to such a scope.
 

mimitchi33

Well-Known Member
This reminds me of those incidents where people claimed that intense rides killed Make-A-Wish kids visiting Disney. While I may agree that intense rides would be bad for them, the child probably died not due to the ride, but because with most of these kids, they could die any moment. I once read a news article where a young girl who wanted to meet Minnie didn't even make it to the parks and died on the plane because her heart stopped. People are insane these days!
 

rob0519

Well-Known Member
On the "positive" side.......

Wouldn't we all want to pass at WDW, as opposed to at work?

Sorry to hear though, it's sad anytime anyone passes!

Part of life though!

Actually, no I would not want to pass away at WDW. My children and family would not want to associate my death with the one place they love the most on earth, at least so far.
 

Ralphlaw

Well-Known Member
Actually, no I would not want to pass away at WDW. My children and family would not want to associate my death with the one place they love the most on earth, at least so far.

If it were me, I would hope that they would see WDW as the place from which my soul was launched to heaven.
 

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