A history of Disney – rides, testimonies & attractions

“In reality, many visitors to Disney World begin the day enthusiastic and after a day of hot sun and waiting in long lines with large crowds for imitations of reality, the tourists are zombie-like and looking forward to getting back to their hotels. Many people have felt the rides were not nearly what they expected. Some of the rides are better than others, and some typically get comments like, ‘It was stupid.’

Some of the spooky events like Snow White’s Adventures, or the oversized heads of the Disney characters walking around can leave the little preschool children terrified and dazed for the rest of the day. In contrast, older children, who normally rarely show patience at home may show how much they want to go on a particular Disney ride, by waiting an hour and a half in the hot sun for a ride.

Alien Encounter is a Walt Disneyland feature that invites tourists in for a ‘demonstration of interplanetary teleportation.’ When the ”demonstration’ as planned ‘breaks down’ an ‘alien’ with asocial traits appears among the audience and terrorizes the audience. A cute creature is hideously fried, deformed, and then vomited into space screaming. Here are some comments from visitors to this Walt Disneyland attraction:

‘Alien Encounter…is one of those rides I can say I’ve seen and that I have no intention of ever doing again. In fact, parents who take children under the age of six should be brought up on child abuse.’ [Woman, from MI]

‘Alien Encounter was the WORST experience for my 10-year-old (and almost every child in there). It starts out cute enough during the preshow, but the actual show is a disaster for children. My daughter screamed and cried in terror throughout it. I thought the Disney warnings were vague and inaccurate. When we left, there wasn’t one child with dry eyes (even sturdy looking 12-year-old boys were crying). I think an age requirement of 13 or 14 is more appropriate. I talked to a few adults and we even agreed that the special effects were extremely unpleasant even for us. This show is not a Disney family experience – it is ATROCIOUS!!’ [A mother from Phillipsburg, NJ]

‘We did go to Alien Encounter.. The preshow is deceiving. It kind of lulls you into thinking ‘this isn’t so bad.’ When the main part came up, I admit the experience gave me the absolute heebie-jeebies…I am never doing that presentation again – it was way too intense for me, and I’m now 27 years of age!’ – [from a family in Laurel, MD]

MD Michael Eisner, the President of Walt Disney Co., initially rejected Alien Encounter for not being scary enough when it was being considered as an addition to Disneyworld. One wonders what he would have liked!

Snow White’s Adventures, which was an attraction at Disneyland, was one of what the Disney people called ‘dark rides’. After a while a sign appeared with a witch warning people that the attraction was scary. Later in 1983, they renamed it Snow White’s Scary Adventures. It might be interesting to point out that when the original Snow White and Seven Dwarfs film came out, that England forbid the film to be seen by any child under 16 unless accompanied by an adult because of the scary content of the movie. How far we have come since then? Schools in the Florida and California areas also make field trips to the Magic Kingdom that are arranged with Disney.

EPCOT receives tens of thousands of children this way during March, September and October. High schools use the Magic Kingdom for proms or senior nights, and some couples use the facilities of the Magic Kingdom for weddings. Modern Bride ranked Orlando as the number-one honeymoon destination in the world. Group discussions of people who took honeymoons to Disney World have had a consensus that the hype is not as great as the reality. Some weddings are done with cartoon characters. Disney offers ‘fairy-tale’ wedding packages. A great deal for two mind-controlled slaves. They can reinforce their programming while getting married. The Disney fairy-tale wedding typically has its ceremony on a pavilion on an island in the Seven Seas Lagoon with the Cinderella Castle as a backdrop. The fairy-tale wedding can then be followed with a Fantasy reception with a choice of themes such as Beauty & the Beast or Aladdin.

The fantasy programming can continue as the bride is delivered to a ‘Cinderella’s Ball’ by an actual glass carriage drawn by six white Disney ponies. A costumed fairy-godmother and stepsisters are also at the ball. Desert is served in a white chocolate slipper.

One of the after-dark shows is Illuminations which consists of music, fireworks, erupting fountains, special lighting, and laser technology done at the World Showcase Lagoon. EPCOT has a show Cranium Command at the Wonders of Life in the Future World section where guests sit in a theater that functions as a command control room for a boy’s brain.

In 1980, Disney came out with the box office flop The Devil & Max Devlin. In 1984, Roy E. Disney brought in Michael Milken, of junk bond fame to help Disney out financially. In 1985, Disney brought MGM’s rights to Leo the Lion logo and began using the MGM Wizard of Oz material.

Later, a remake of Alice in Wonderland came out in the modern motif of Honey I shrank the kids. In the 1990s, Illuminati controlled companies continued their promotion of Disney. For instance, the Nestle family’s Nestle company promotes Disney movies on their chocolate bars.” [The Nestle family is one of the elite Black Nobility families.]

“In 1996, Walt Disney World created an actual residential town named Celebration on its property. This self-contained community has 20,000 and a school, a theater, a fiber optic information network linking business, as well as other features.”

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