Again...
Even before the pandemic, WDW had a problem with overcrowding at MK. There were carrots and sticks to drive away people from 'the peak times.'
And now, there is a labor shortage. WDW can't handle now the holiday crowds that they had in the before times. So, they clamped down on attendance with the Park Pass reservations system.
People right now cannot buy a ticket on some upcoming holiday dates because WDW is sold out. (MK itself has even more sold out dates, but you can still buy a ticket to get into the other parks.)
Let me repeat this, because it's going to be important for understanding the AP 'pause' -- you cannot buy day tickets because the parks (mostly MK at this point) are SOLD OUT.
Now, for APs: If the parks are sold out, what good does it do anyone to buy an AP when they can't use it because the parks are SOLD OUT? Why would WDW sell an AP to someone and then listen to them complain and demand their money back because they can't use their AP because the parks are SOLD OUT?
There is no conspiracy here. WDW isn't "creating demand to raise prices." That's conspiracy theory time base on nerdrage. Especially when all the *evidence* (and not blind guesswork) points to WDW just simply clamping down on the attendance level of the parks due to their labor shortage.
You all heard of the labor shortage which is happening nearly everywhere and is constantly in the news, right? It's real. It's affecting WDW.
APs aren't magic. They can't get you into a park that's closed because it's full. And APs aren't being singled out. People who buy the day-tickets are finding they can't get into the parks on certain days, because those days are SOLD OUT.