Baron
I was just going to chime in with the usual sentiments regarding those good ole days when you blew me away with this statement:
Thank you. This is what seemingly fails to be properly reflected here. The glasses analogy works both ways Im afraid. Viking is right when it becomes an issue of lets reminisce, our memory can sometimes fail to serve as an accurate medium. This is mainly because there is no bias to affect ones perception when first embarking on the World.
Ah, but how quickly that impression begins to fade once something youve grown to rely on substantially changes (enter the infamous straw mentality). Since when was a vacation critically dependent on a piece of chicken, molded butter and an operating schedule? Come-on! Heavy reliance on the external is a guaranteed formula for disappointment.
The concern I have with the business practice blame game is when it appears to lack any degree of counterbalance or justifiable application. What rarely gets mentioned is the reality of simple economics. How certain financial demands continually escalate and burden a business, which cannot possibly be passed along without affecting the customer.
It would be foolishly unrealistic today to not expect someone to have a problem with just about every change imaginable. People complain and complain and complain as if their voice truly represents the population, when in reality it barely supports a small fraction of a sample. That does not make anyone wrong. It simply means one may feel so compelled in argument; they fail to concede that the majority of individuals dont share their sentiments to the same degree.
It just doesnt matter to most people - particularly with respect to Disneyworld (which is what many here are closely associated with). That place continues to wow its audience and has remained exactly what it has always been: a great vacation destination. There really is no sign of this changing so why continually draw a false hypothesis in defense of an unsubstantiated argument?
I was just going to chime in with the usual sentiments regarding those good ole days when you blew me away with this statement:
So, YES!!! I admit it!! My Disney was not perfect!! We usually dont discuss the problems of thirty years ago, but it had a lot of problems!! A whole bunch of problems!!
Thank you. This is what seemingly fails to be properly reflected here. The glasses analogy works both ways Im afraid. Viking is right when it becomes an issue of lets reminisce, our memory can sometimes fail to serve as an accurate medium. This is mainly because there is no bias to affect ones perception when first embarking on the World.
Ah, but how quickly that impression begins to fade once something youve grown to rely on substantially changes (enter the infamous straw mentality). Since when was a vacation critically dependent on a piece of chicken, molded butter and an operating schedule? Come-on! Heavy reliance on the external is a guaranteed formula for disappointment.
The concern I have with the business practice blame game is when it appears to lack any degree of counterbalance or justifiable application. What rarely gets mentioned is the reality of simple economics. How certain financial demands continually escalate and burden a business, which cannot possibly be passed along without affecting the customer.
It would be foolishly unrealistic today to not expect someone to have a problem with just about every change imaginable. People complain and complain and complain as if their voice truly represents the population, when in reality it barely supports a small fraction of a sample. That does not make anyone wrong. It simply means one may feel so compelled in argument; they fail to concede that the majority of individuals dont share their sentiments to the same degree.
It just doesnt matter to most people - particularly with respect to Disneyworld (which is what many here are closely associated with). That place continues to wow its audience and has remained exactly what it has always been: a great vacation destination. There really is no sign of this changing so why continually draw a false hypothesis in defense of an unsubstantiated argument?