I dunno. If I had a critically ill child and medical experts had cleared the facility and my kid’s medical team felt is was appropriate or at the very least wouldn’t add to the harm of my child, I’d be thrilled to at least have a choice to have one last crack with them.Wow...this seems like a monumentally bad idea. Of course I want the village to be up and running, but it really seems like a very very bad idea.
I gasped out loud at work. Happy happy joy joy
If the PeopleMover is moving, but there are no people in it, isn't it just "the Mover?"
I can understand the justification on outdoor rides and I can somewhat get it on constantly moving/fast indoor ones even though I would not personally be comfortable. MFSR is different, plexiglass or not. It’s small closed in spaces where you are stationary. People focus way too much on 6 feet and 15 minutes IMO, and have interpreted it as a near guaranteed safe zone that will prevent you from getting infected.
Seems like a bad idea but everywhere is so chaotic right now nobody would ever be able to reliably prove they caught Covid at WDW and catching it at a public place (even WDW) is no longer headline worthy so maybe they just don’t care.
More importantly individuals have a responsibility to keep themselves safe. So if something feels unsafe, perhaps you shouldn’t visit as you have stated.
This one is normally a favorite of the family's, but we were really disappointed with the limited menu. It was perhaps the most noticeable to us beyond the resort QS.
Do we think Jan hours are pretty set or is it likely they’ll increase?
Yeah, six feet is a minimum. You’re not magically protected if you stay six feet away and get 14mn59seconds/24hours exposure.
Disagree. Public health is not a personal choice. It is something that every individual and business needs to be involved in. Businesses have a moral responsibility to protect people’s health and life to a certain point. A pandemic requires different measures than normal times, some of which will hurt profits. It is not a personal feeling of being unsafe. The theme parks ARE creating unsafe environments based on the scientific data about the virus. The theme parks have changed their tune since July when they advertised they would keep everyone six feet apart- though the verbiage on the websites, signs, and audio recordings that state distancing is in place and expected of guests is still there. They are contradicting their own published policies.
In that regard, they’re creating an unsafe environment just by being open as the cdc said it’s one of the most dangerous activities ppl can do right now.Yeah, six feet is a minimum. You’re not magically protected if you stay six feet away and get 14mn59seconds/24hours exposure.
Disagree. Public health is not a personal choice. It is something that every individual and business needs to be involved in. Businesses have a moral responsibility to protect people’s health and life to a certain point. A pandemic requires different measures than normal times, some of which will hurt profits. It is not a personal feeling of being unsafe. The theme parks ARE creating unsafe environments based on the scientific data about the virus. The theme parks have changed their tune since July when they advertised they would keep everyone six feet apart- though the verbiage on the websites, signs, and audio recordings that state distancing is in place and expected of guests is still there. They are contradicting their own published policies.
Possibly a bit but I wouldn’t expect much change with the news today that select dining locations will move to weekends only. That shows they won’t be needed.Do we think Jan hours are pretty set or is it likely they’ll increase?
Do we think Jan hours are pretty set or is it likely they’ll increase?
Do we think Jan hours are pretty set or is it likely they’ll increase?
That’s when we are going so that’ll workMaybe for MLK weekend, but that would probably be it.