CStraub,
Regretfully I have been the victim of a driveby roll, tossed by an unruly child at the back of my head.
While there have been many times that children dining around me have been wonderfully polite and well mannered, there have also been many times that they've been out of control, running round the table, screaming, and the parents are oblivious.
The last time we ate at Jiko, there was a husband and wife and child, about two or so. They hadn't even been served dinner and teh kid started to scream like his hand was being cut off. He kept doing this for about ten minutes, until the mother finally left with him. For all of about five minutes. Then he was back. Next he started to throw anything he could get his hands on. Food, a glass of milk, you name it. The parents again ignored him. And he started the screaming again. Get this--the parents then ordered dessert while junior continued screaming. Even the kids in the family on the other side of us started commenting that they needed to leave. And they did, when they were darn well ready. Those extraordinarily selfish parents allowed their little monster to disrupt the dinner of every other diner in the place.
We've had similar types of experiences at the YSH, the CG, and Narcooses, just to name a few.
I'm not opposed to having a couple of adult only restaurants at WDW. There are no adult activities there, like the Pirate Cruise, so why not no children places? I'm not suggesting that all of the more upscale restaurants be off limits to kids by any means. But I don't see the harm in having a couple of adult only places. Parents who choose to dine with their children would not be forced to eat there, and there would certainly be quite a few upscale restaurants that were still open to families with well behaved children.
Club 33 at DL IS child free, and was a favorite haunt of Walt himself. Some parents enjoy dining without their children once or twice during their vacations. That is their choice, and just as no one is dictating that you must dine without your children, you also have no right to dictate that all parents must always dine with theirs at every meal. It's a matter of personal choice, just like eating at a childfree restaurant (or not eating there) would be.
BTW--Did you know that one of WDW's largest target demographics for marketing purposes is honeymooners? It would seem that if WDW only wanted to appeal to people with children, they wouldn't be trying to attrack those couples.
Anne