Pat,
It is not I who "don't get it."
You said, "Clubs with significant debt will be the first to go since the reduced number of members won't be able to support the debt, with its rising per member annual cost."
Many of these clubs you want to save have acquired significant debt by building opulent clubhouses, tennis facilities & pool complexes... commissioning $10 million course renovations... providing dining services meant to rival the finest restaurants. I feel no sorrow if these clubs drown under their own financial weight.
Your gloom and doom prophecy was preached when tax deductions for dues were eliminated years ago. Still, these clubs were able to survive and dig themselves into an even deeper trench.
It is the law of the jungle that is in play here: Be Good or Be Gone!
Again, you are talking about good people losing jobs. Further, if clubs go under, they may not be able to pay those who actually did the work you denigrate already. How fair is that? A lot of independent businessmen extend their own credit to get jobs - it sucks to do it, but those who are not self-employed often can't understand what is involved with the thinking behind whether or not to do a job.
I'm not advocating bailouts of any sort, but I think it's a little callous to dismiss Pat's concerns.
George,
I am self-employed and have (successfully) run my own business since 1990. Before that I was the typical "corporate man," so I understand both sides of the argument very well.
My wife started her own small business five years ago after 30 years as a teacher in the public school system, so we also understand the government's role in providing employment and benefits.
Pat expressed concerns about protecting a "way of life." You can cloak it in anything you want, but "way of life" in ths context translates into the "haves" hanging onto their privileged social meeting places. If they have enough money to support the lifestyle to which they have become accustomed, then so be it. If they have made poor decisions that put their "lifestyle" in jeopardy, then too bad for them. They should have thought long and hard about the possible consequences before spending that last million dollars on a clubhouse renovation, hiring a $150,000 a year chef... or, approving the 1.7 million dollar course maintenance budget, or hiring the $250,000 rock star superintendent.