Disney observation
May. 7th, 2011 08:31 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Okay, just got back from a Disneyland vacation with Jack and my brother, sister and sister-in-law. Keep in mind, my sister-in-law has MS and uses a wheelchair.
Now, we've long seen modern-day parents so concerned about their children's happiness at Disneyland that they push them around in strollers, up to the kid's age of 10 or 11, judging from their size. (Back in my day, any kid sentient enough to realize he or she was in a stroller was too old to be pushed around in one.)
Now these parents have taken their entitlement to a new level. Park-goers in wheelchairs can often use the exit lines, because the entry lines are often too narrow for wheelchairs to pass through. The folks in wheelchairs get wheeled up the exit line, often bypassing the long lines of people waiting to ride, and get transferred to the ride conveyance that way. That's the only way they could reach the front of the line to get aboard the ride.
I'd never noticed it before, because I wasn't with a party that had a wheelchair in it, but now parents with strollers, holding kids that are too big for strollers, are trying to do the same thing. Go up the exit line, bypassing the lines of waiting crowds, because their perfectly able-bodied kids shouldn't have to wait. And if these other folks being pushed in wheeled chairs can do it, why shouldn't they. It's just not fair, they tell ya.
To Disneyland's credit, I didn't see anyone get away with it. The Disney employees would patiently explain to these idiot parents that they had to use the regular line, because a child sitting in a stroller is not the same as a person confined to a wheelchair.
Now, we've long seen modern-day parents so concerned about their children's happiness at Disneyland that they push them around in strollers, up to the kid's age of 10 or 11, judging from their size. (Back in my day, any kid sentient enough to realize he or she was in a stroller was too old to be pushed around in one.)
Now these parents have taken their entitlement to a new level. Park-goers in wheelchairs can often use the exit lines, because the entry lines are often too narrow for wheelchairs to pass through. The folks in wheelchairs get wheeled up the exit line, often bypassing the long lines of people waiting to ride, and get transferred to the ride conveyance that way. That's the only way they could reach the front of the line to get aboard the ride.
I'd never noticed it before, because I wasn't with a party that had a wheelchair in it, but now parents with strollers, holding kids that are too big for strollers, are trying to do the same thing. Go up the exit line, bypassing the lines of waiting crowds, because their perfectly able-bodied kids shouldn't have to wait. And if these other folks being pushed in wheeled chairs can do it, why shouldn't they. It's just not fair, they tell ya.
To Disneyland's credit, I didn't see anyone get away with it. The Disney employees would patiently explain to these idiot parents that they had to use the regular line, because a child sitting in a stroller is not the same as a person confined to a wheelchair.
no subject
Date: 2011-05-09 12:28 am (UTC)