the idea of offering seats to veterans is a new one. should it be obvious that they are veterans?
As a military member myself (still in the service), this veteran idea I think lines up with Captain America's overall "thinking about others" viewpoint. In looking back on history, America has had mixed views on returning veterans from war (and we seem to learn from each):
WWI: pretty agnostic to their plight
WWII: pretty good (GI Bill was pretty revolutionary at the time)
Korean: pretty good
Vietnam: fairly bad (viewed as bad people even though some were drafted), PTS was not a thing, and led to dishonorable discharges vs getting mental health treatment

Gulf War: pretty good (but not much mental health treatment)
Post 9/11: very supportive, better mental health recognition
Some older Veterans (not all) like to wear their service hats, so that can make it easy. Some veterans also have wounds/injuries incurred in combat/service on behalf of our country (I.e., for us all), and they tend to be quiet about them (apart from physical wounds, think also of agent orange exposure, burn pit exposure, excessive blast/noise exposure, etc.), so it's nice to offer a seat to them, since it might take the edge off the pain/permanent discomfort.
But I think it's the same for offering it to a mother, senior, or as Capt A said...
someone who just looks like they need it. More of kind gesture. Overseas, in Europe and Japan, I have seen plenty of signs on transportation that identify the front seats for not just ADA folks, but also elderly, expecting mothers, and new-born mothers. They realize that these groups just have it harder to move around then more able-bodied folks. Not a fair-unfair thing...just more of a "that's just the hand life dealt me" thing.
Reminds of "The Giving Tree" book, where the stump offer a nice seat for the elderly boy at the end.
Anyways, as the OP....my though was just to gather viewpoints from others on this stroller topic. It's not just a Disney culture thing, but an America culture thing, on what type of societal support structure do we want for supporting little children (and their parents). Much like all the conversations about what type of structure do we want for ADA people, mentally-impaired people, etc. These are all societal discussion on how we want to live together vs. always defaulting to "it's up to you to manage your own affairs"...which, in my view, is not a very healthy society. But I also don't want a fully socialized society where individuals don't have personal choice...so again, just a conversation about balance and
how DisBoard community viewed strollers (with sleeping babies in them) in buses
....and based on the current poll: Less than 1%!
