You'd be wrong, their theme park business is enormously profitable and their ticket price increases outpace inflation. Their theme park segment generated $2.45 BILLION in profit last year.
If that were true would you not expected California and Florida to have disproportionately higher missing persons reports per capita? But they don't, Alaska far and away does, and Arizona is #2.
And exactly how many people do you think they traffic and how much do you think they get paid for a trafficked person? Both numbers would have to be staggering to be a drop in the bucket to a $21 billion a year in earnings company.
You'd be wrong, their theme park business is enormously profitable and their ticket price increases outpace inflation. Their theme park segment generated $2.45 BILLION in profit last year.
https://www.thestreet.com/investing/disneys-theme-parks-make-money-again-you-may-not-like-why
Yea - right you are. Well, I still think the revenue enhancement from human trafficking was an important part of their business model.
If that were true would you not expected California and Florida to have disproportionately higher missing persons reports per capita? But they don't, Alaska far and away does, and Arizona is #2.
https://worldpopulationreview.com/state-rankings/missing-persons-by-state
And exactly how many people do you think they traffic and how much do you think they get paid for a trafficked person? Both numbers would have to be staggering to be a drop in the bucket to a $21 billion a year in earnings company.
hy·per·bo·le
/hīˈpərbəlē/
noun exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally. "he vowed revenge with oaths and hyperboles"