FWIW, I’ve never complained about anything Disney did till recently. I was one of those walking advertisements for WDW. 2 weeks there almost yearly, kids rooms decorated Disney, Disney scrubs (I’m a Nurse Practitioner), humming the theme to Wishes, talking people into Disney vacays, and even defending Disney. Now I’m a realist and I see the greed coupled with a reduced experience and it makes me sad and angry. I’m not just someone who loves to complain. If you say anything against Disney on here you’re “never happy”. I was happy with Disney for 30 years.
You have plenty of company here. I'd say a good half of regular contributors, if not more, are deeply dissatisfied with Disney parks and happy to share their feelings on it.
The other half are very happy with Disney. They either don't agree with your complaints or they don't see them as worth complaining about, because - for them - Disney is still providing excellent value. They don't see "greed" and they're not experiencing a reduced experience.
What ends up happening in threads like these is that the nay-sayers feel like the yay-sayers are dismissing their complaints and characterizing them as unhappy, overly-critical people. And the yay-sayers feel attacked in their own turn, as they get accused of wearing blinkers, having "drunk the kool-aid" and basically being idiots for being happy with the current state of affairs. Both sides consider themselves the true "realists".
Then both sides dig into their respective camps and start lobbing grenades at each other, until the thread gets locked.
Here's the thing, I'm sure you don't "love" to complain. I'm sure you are frequently happy. The Disney magic has worn off and you are feeling dissatisfied. You want your point of view validated and supported. And there's lots of people who will do that for you here!
And, along the way, you'll engage in arguments with people who disagree with you.
Me, this isn't the sort of thing I enjoy long term, though it can be fun in short doses. I take frequent long breaks from this board, when I find it's ruining my enjoyment of Disney planning. We also take frequent long breaks from the Disney parks, whenever we find that we're enjoying them less. We're just coming off a nearly two year break, and boy... did I LOVE my last trip to Disney World!
So, I'm on a high, right now.
I like to be happy (as I'm sure you do, too), and I think it's important to protect that positive feeling. So, whenever I notice it going away, then I know it's time to leave.