Easier for me as a single guy, or traveling with friends or family who have their own money - and with the extra Florida resident perks, annual passes, and DVC, very little of the price fluctuations really hit me when metered out on a per-day basis. I get the article's point - but as they also mention, it's not just Disney but all parks, from Universal to smaller local parks. I think also with far fewer Americans traveling abroad due to fears and current conditions, more are willing to spend their 'one big trip' cash on going to Disney and staying in the U.S. borders...so that's probably keeping the impact of higher prices from really being noticed by all but the poor...middle class is just spending money that might have been spent elsewhere, and the rich are unimpacted. I suppose the middle class family who has always included Disney as part of their travel plans would be the ones most impacted - sadly that's probably a big part of our boards! Because they notice the difference year-to-year, and because a vacation for 4-5 at those prices is much harder to account for than it is for me, where I only have to pay my own way. I admit greedily I wouldn't mind the parks being thinned out and lines dropping back, even some backing off of the relentless marketing and tie-in events and stores and meet-n-greets...I'd gladly pay extra for the privilege of going to a less crowded park, if I could. I also wish more Americans were more willing to travel abroad again, so there aren't as many traveling only within the US, which pumps up the crowds at Disney - stupid terrorists may not always have the big impacts they want, but it's those little impacts that just mess with the normal, old routine life that dig at me. When I travel outside the U.S. each year, I find I'm surrounded more and more by Brits, Canadians, Latin Americans, Chinese, Indians, etc - and less by other Americans.