I think I do not have a reputation around these parts as being a Disney apologist by even the slightest measure, but this is one area that I think Disney is absolutely correct.
Disneyland has had a ceiling on its airspace since practically the day it opened and for a practical safety aspect. The park attracts private pilots like a candle attracts moths simply because they want to go sightseeing. It was quickly realized that with so many planes gawking that eventually two were going to end up in the same airspace at the same time. Not only would the pilots and passengers be at risk, so too would all those underneath them. While the article talks about public airspace and the glories of towing the Rosie OGrady banner over Epcot, it fails to mention the seven pilots who died doing so. One has to wonder if the ability to sell a few more drinks was worth the cost or the risk that death number eight would have added to that count by victims on the ground.
And unlike the Mall of America, or the Sears Tower or Ernies Wresslin Gator Farm - Disney has been and is the target of specific and direct threats. A sarin gas attack on Disneyland, launched by the same group that carried out the successful attack in a Toyko subway, was thwarted in Los Angeles (the terrorists were on their way to the park with the gas in their backpacks). Disneyland was the probable back-up target for the Millennium bombing of LAX. Disneyland Paris has been the site of several attacks since opening: everything from French farm workers blowing up power lines to gangs of Anarchists beating up costumed characters to a cell funding their operations by theft on property. And maps of WDW have been found in the caves of Afghanistan next to videotapes of the crowds.
The goal of the no fly zone and a lot of seemingly pointless security measures is not to provide an impenetrable bubble protected by anti-aircraft batteries. You can not stop terrorist attacks like that. The goal is to provide friction, a series of small individual barriers and traps that through their simple accumulation of weight with cause problems. Many analysts believe the target of the plane that hit the Pentagon was originally supposed to be the White House. But because of existing flight restrictions at the time (remember that someone did crash a private plane into the White House a few years earlier) that this medieval cockroach flying the plane was unfamiliar with the area and couldnt locate the building. He circled around again and hit the biggest thing he could find the Pentagon.
Its the little things that count. The LAX bombing was stopped by a customs inspector that wondered why this guy wouldnt open his trunk; an inspection that found a leaking pipe stopped the plot to pump nerve gas into the American embassy in Rome. Perhaps just maybe preventing someone from making a practice run at Spaceship Earth is worth it. Hopefully well never know, but Ill take the uncertainty over my right to read a banner touting a drink special at Hooters.
The false sense of security being touted is the fantasy that hunky Ben Affleck will single handily stop the nuclear bomb by racing through the city to the pulsating sound track or that a Navy SEAL team will burst into the bad guys lair and deliver a flourish of karate moves just as the timer reaches 0:00:03. It is a fantasy because we want to be just an audience to all of this, to be able to sit back and watch the thrilling pictures, to cheer for the good guys, and to carry on life as normal. We want "other guy" to have to pay the price of security, we want to suffer no change in our routine or the slighest inconvinence.
This war is not being fought for our amusement and none of us can demand to remain unaffected. Although the images on 9/11 seemed like something out of a Bruckheimer movie they were real. The actions necessary to prevent those images from happening again have to be real as well.