Your comment has nothing whatsoever to do with mine. I am not taking your bait for an argument.
I'm sorry that you took my question to be baiting for an argument. I didn't mean it that way.
It just seems to me that so much of this discussion centers on making allowances for other people's actions that inconvenience us.
Some have 'famously' taken the position that they do whatever makes them happy with little regard for others' enjoyment. Some like yourself have taken the other extreme view that they would never let even their own medical condition infringe upon the enjoyment of others and it is rude of others to do the same.
I supposed, rather reasonably I think, that reality would push each of us somewhat closer to the center of this spectrum. I mean, as a society we have required a certain level of acceptance of the needs of others in the form of the ADA.
If it's busy at WDW, the ADA requires 4-9 able bodied people to wait for the next bus so that one disabled person in a wheelchair (and their family) can ride. Well, the ADA requires 4 people lose their seats to the disabled person and Disney policy allows up to 5 additional family to accompany them.
The position you posed seemed very firmly opposed to letting other people's get in the way of your fun (and vice versa) so I raised this example to see where you draw the line, or at least to agree that there is a line.
Wheelchair guy is a pretty extreme case of serious disability + significant annoyance to others. I acknowlege that it's an annoyance to be pushed out of line for the bus but I accept it because I wouldn't want to be where wheelchair guy is even if that means getting back to the resort sooner.
But what about glow-light shoe guy? He gets dizzy or nauseous if he doesn't know where his feet are. But glow-lights are a distraction on dark rides. So... poor baby bomb victim? He should just stay off the dark rides?
Or the kid with a fear of the unknown that's just a little more than she can bear without a small flashlight? Too bad, come back when you can do the ride without it?
Or the woman who loves Disney so much that she just can't help herself and takes pictures all through Haunted Mansion? She doesn't get to capture her memories just because it screw up your vision or causes an epileptic seizure?
I hope what you are getting is that there is a line where reasonable people say, "no, that's going to far". I don't mean to Judge you, I'm just curious where you draw yours.
I put mine somewhere just a little before flashlight kid. Try to find a solution that doesn't project a beam out of your ride carriage.