M
mrsltg
Guest
what would you do if you were the head of security at WDW
It's too open and accessible to do much of anything. They either need to set security rules and enforce them vigorously - meaning metal detectors, armed security (not the 60-85 y.o. crowd so prevelant at Disney security check points), pat downs on large coats and clothing. No outside food products being brought into the parks, and no backpacks at all.
Who would go if any of the above were the case? No one. The answer instead is to stop wasting peoples time and end the charade. The bag checks do what, exactly? Nothing. As I said, someone could just as easily set off an explosive outside the parks in a large group of people as they could inside the parks. The people that they have checking the bags are generally retirees and people not in good physical condition. My husband is 6'3" and has been a cop for more than 13 years. If he wanted to push past these guards, which one can stop him? The 75 year old, or the one 100 pounds overweight?
Disney needs to maintain a security presence to prevent individual attacks on guests (ie, molestations, rapes, robberies, pick pockets, etc), but they can't do a thing about terrorism. I don't think that it's a good idea to set-up a facade of safety that makes people let their guard down and then not pay attention. People need to understand that there is no "safe" place when it comes to terrorist activity. Go to DisneyWorld, enjoy yourself, but don't think that you're in a protective bubble because someone looks in your backpack.
My job takes me into lower Manhattan at least three times a week. I think about security lapses every time I board the subway, cross over the GWB, jump on a bus or get into the elevator of a high rise.
Kind of like here in DC? Where I drive past the Pentagon everyday, work 2 blocks from the White House, spend time on the Hill, and open mail hoping it isn't laced with Anthrax?
Erin
