Ryan,
Clearly you're in the right camp but I don't agree with your assessment that the game needs more members. If clubs have more members, great but, as I see it, half the problem lies in overly high maintenance costs which then require a club to have 700 members just to break even. When you're set up with the bar that high just to stay open, you're set up for a fall. I used to work for a commercial operation just like that and its ugly. 1,000 members means no one is happy as there's a permanent struggle just to get a tee time. A his stage perhaps Jon's on little venture might not be a bad comparison. I don't know the ins and outs of it and don't want to speak out of turn but I suspect Jon's model has weathered the recession far better with far few golfers than the more commercial operations.
The bottom line is that until overheads are brought back in line with reality, and that means re-educating the masses as to just what proper golf looks and feels like, golf as it is, for a great many people, is unsustainable. Once upon a time only the lord of the manor and chums could afford to join the golf club. Those folk effectively paid hefty sums to keep the course quiet. That is no longer the case but, as the game has become ever cheaper, overheads have got ever greater. Something there has to give and I'll suggest the answer doesn't lie in having a four ball going off ever six minutes during each and every waking hour of daylight.