RamblingMad
I'm an 80s kid too.
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2019
Those buffets and character meals wow! But even the counter places are high too.
Why does food cost more at WDW than UO? I can't wrap me ahead around the difference.
Those buffets and character meals wow! But even the counter places are high too.
Imagine that!Also in health care and was completely shocked to learn ‘free’ health care means someone decides for you what type of treatment you get, if any. I cared for a women in her early forties who left her family in Switzerland and came to the US for treatment of her pancreatic cancer. She was told her mortality rate was too high for her government to pay for her treatment. Everything has a cost... even those that are free.
Also in health care and was completely shocked to learn ‘free’ health care means someone decides for you what type of treatment you get, if any. I cared for a women in her early forties who left her family in Switzerland and came to the US for treatment of her pancreatic cancer. She was told her mortality rate was too high for her government to pay for her treatment. Everything has a cost... even those that are free.
Not sure, maybe different target audience? I know Universal is more targeted towards older, there's not really the same buffet and character dining at Universal that almost seems like the bread and butter of WDW. I must say I found even Harry Potter restaurants to be reasonable enough for food, no it's not 'cheap' but it's like their IT thing at Universal and it's not out of control high.Why does food cost more at WDW than UO? I can't wrap me ahead around the difference.
i don’t understand if her Swiss insurance refused to pay why she would choose to fly to the US for Cancer treatment. THE one place where if you get ill you do not want to pay OOP as It’s the most expensive to begin with. She could have paid private in Switzerland, been by family and saved tens of thousands. Americans travel to Europe for private treatment often its cheaper the whole medical tourism thing. Europe is known for cancer. Asia for plastic and Mexico for dental and hips etc. ( niche segment for my company )Also in health care and was completely shocked to learn ‘free’ health care means someone decides for you what type of treatment you get, if any. I cared for a women in her early forties who left her family in Switzerland and came to the US for treatment of her pancreatic cancer. She was told her mortality rate was too high for her government to pay for her treatment. Everything has a cost... even those that are free.
It happens more than people realize. Often it’s because of a specific doctor that specializes in something that that particular patient has, sometimes it’s because there’s family nearby, sometimes it’s because the patient feels they’re in the best hands ie there’s trust, lots of reasons.
i don’t understand if her Swiss insurance refused to pay why she would choose to fly to the US for Cancer treatment. THE one place where if you get ill you do not want to pay OOP as It’s the most expensive to begin with. She could have paid private in Switzerland, been by family and saved tens of thousands. Americans travel to Europe for private treatment often its cheaper the whole medical tourism thing. Europe is known for cancer. Asia for plastic and Mexico for dental and hips etc. ( niche segment for my company )
Not sure, maybe different target audience? I know Universal is more targeted towards older, there's not really the same buffet and character dining at Universal that almost seems like the bread and butter of WDW. I must say I found even Harry Potter restaurants to be reasonable enough for food, no it's not 'cheap' but it's like their IT thing at Universal and it's not out of control high.
Sigh... the price of a DCL cruise and/or a stay in the Contemporary for just one night.
In fairness, that type of vacation may well have cost your parents more of their discretionary income than it cost you. Some things have come down in price and you are likely in a better financial situation than your parents were (but that's a broad generalization between generations).This is a little different than what most people are saying, but it was the first thing I though of. Growing up we hardly ever went anywhere on vacation and never any real traveling. I had a notion that it was something that only really rich people were able to do. So when I became an adult and started to manage my own finances I was absolutely shocked that travel didn't cost more than it did. I remember my sister pulled me aside after my husband and I went to Paris and asked really sheepishly if I minded telling her how much it cost. She explained that they wouldn't have to go all "fancy" like we did and she was positively floored that it hadn't cost a good three or four times what it did. I guess we all grew up with that same notion.