I wonder ... are there bigger crowds walking around on the streets and pathways because there are fewer people riding on attractions?
I don't think this is the case at all. Keep in mind that there are a lot of people at Disney World on any given day who are there for the first time, or first time in a long time. The things that you and I may be tired of are brand new to them. The week I was there, we also had friends who were there with their 3 children on their first family trip. The parents had each been to Disney but not since they were about 10 years old. They're now in their mid-30s. So pretty much everything was new and they sucked it up just like you and I did on our early trips.
I can also assure you that the "super snoozers" were not sitting vacant. You listed: China, France and Canada. Energy Adventure, Imagination, Carousel of Progress, Living with the Land, Great Movie Ride. Even Spaceship Earth. We did 7 of those 9 attractions last week (well 2 weeks ago now). All of them had respectable numbers of guests in line. Heck, we bypassed Spaceship Earth a couple of times because the line was so long. We finally caught it later in the week when the line was more reasonable.
The parks are simply more crowded and the attendance numbers confirm that, as mikedoyleblogger mentioned. Over the past 20 years, MK attendance has increased nearly 50%. Go farther back to the 70s when I started going and attendance has increased closer to 4-fold.
The complaints are laughable. Those of us who've been going to WDW since the seventies can remember a time when we stood in line at Space Mountain two hours or longer.
Now, I don't think magic bands have approved the experience so much unless you go during a moribund time of year: you'll still ride no problem three or four attractions, tops, and stand in line for the rest. But this info won't stop people from believing there was a magical time before or during the Eisner years when a Disney park experience wasn't hellish. I mean, let's face it -- the fast food offered is healthier than it was in 1994 or 1984. This is a fact yet people want to commemorate the horrible chicken wings that Tomorrowland Terrace served when the Eagles topped the charts.
This is true, but isn't really the point I'm focusing on. Sure, I remember going in the pre-FastPass days where if you wanted to ride something, you got in line and waited. My wife's first trip was with me in 1990. We didn't ride Jungle Cruise. Why? The line was too long and I wasn't going to wait an hour for it. On her 2nd trip, same story. Third trip, the same. Finally, on her 4th trip, we went during the then-off-season and she got to see Jungle Cruise. Today, if we really were dead set on riding it, we'd book a FP for it.
As for the food, I am 100% in agreement. The food at Disney is phenomenal. When we go to other amusement parks like Great Adventure or Hersheypark, we dread lunch time. The food is horribly overpriced and lousy. We look forward to eating at Disney parks where the food is very reasonably priced and excellent.
But back to my point - the crowds. Even though there might have been a 60 minute wait for the Jungle Cruise in 1990, the park itself wasn't that crowded. You could easily walk along the paths, stop and take pictures, admire the details, browse the shops. That isn't the case any more. Today, the parks are jam packed with people. More than once, I turned to my wife as we were trying to maneuver our way through and just told her where to meet me because even trying to stay together was a challenge. When we had lunch at Cosmic Ray's, we did 2 full laps around the restaurant looking for seats and never found any. We ended up eating standing up. We bypassed many PhotoPass photographs that we would have liked to have taken because of the length of the line of people waiting (this is partly a consequence of PP now being included with APs). Bottom line is that there are simply millions of more people visiting the parks each year and there isn't any more space for them to go. They're all converging on the same area as when there were millions fewer.