Let me call a healthy dose of bullshit on Duncan and Adrian's characterisation of young golfers and what they want from a club and their attitude to the rules and traditions of the game.
I'm 27 and know a good cross-section of blokes from their teens up to their early 30s in Australia, the UK and the US who play golf. Very few fit this ridiculous framework from which we judge "young golfers".
Simply, most young golfers want all the same things golfers have wanted from a club for eons. They are respectful of rules and traditions of golf and of golf clubs are want to be a part of that.
Clubs are modernising in some areas re: dress, yes, and that may be to attract and please members, but if you cast an eye back to Old Tom's day you'll probably see that it has already modernised quite a bit.
The "earings and tattoos" line is completely ridiculous. An ex-army bloke at Deal has a heap of tattoos and yet you won't find a friendlier, respectful, more convivial bloke to play golf with. James Boon has a few cattle tags through his ear and unless he is fooling us all he is just as respectful of the game and its place in the world as Chappers or Spangles Muldoon.
Adrian, you must have had your eyes closed a lot of years if you think people with tats and earrings wanting to join golf clubs is something new.
Young golfers are just like any other generation of golfers. There are those we would want in our clubs and those we would not. There are those who respect the game, it's traditions and rules and some who don't.
Fixating on some ridiculous stereotype of "the youth of today" to try to chart golf's course through the 21st century is crazy.