The world is full of risks and hazards to which everyone is subject.
If you dine out and the seating is LT 6' apart, that's a visible risk you take.
If you go to a theme park where there are thousands, that's on you.
OTOH, if they do not warn and sanitize common objects, that's on them.
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Fully agree... people have to estimate their own risk and act upon it as they see fit....
I raised the question about annual passes as the risks have changed and if now you no longer want to the parks at all, should you get a refund?
Say you bought/activated a pass on 1/1/2020 and planned multiple trips over the year and besides the initial Jan visit, you have cancelled all the other trips and no longer want to accept the new risks. Just the way airlines/cruises/tour companies are being pressed to give refunds rather than credits... does that apply to advance use park tickets? Also if you bought an annual pass and now because of reduced admission, you can't get a "reserved spot" to get into the park... again, this is not what you originally bought which was a pass that gave you 365 days of use... This may be easier for Disney to fight as all tickets are subject to capacity restrictions, but it does raise another argument for refunds.
I think the Shanghai idea of not reactivating the pass until your next trip/usage is a great way around it... if a pass was only used for 3 months before the stoppage, you have a pass with 9 months to go but only starts on your next use/reactivation. If you decide to rebook your multiple trips 12-18 months later, you pickup right where you left off... That seems to be the fairest way.... We will see....