An aside:
several years ago I exchanged views with Brad Klein about the lack of longer-form essays/thought pieces in the major magazines. His point was: editors look at the online numbers/data and decide that they don't want any more than a high-concept 300 word snapshot; my point was, maybe the data is a self-fulfilling prophecy, ie you give readers nothing more than high-concept 500 word snapshots and when they stop reading after 300 words you decide that this will be the new word count -- instead of considering the possibility that they've stopped reading precisely because they're tired of high-concept snapshots of ANY length, and are hungering for something real to sink their teeth into.
Which is to say: this is an important topic, the 'affordable' $150 green fee -- an issue that I believe a LOT of average golfers would like to have insightfully explored and unpacked in all its nuances.
Ran is a bright man, and a good writer himself -- why not give a Sean A or Tom D or Kyle H or Gib P etc a chance at 1500-2000 words to explore the topic and start a meaningful conversation about the pros/cons/future of the new normal in quality golf?
In the hands of a good writer, and without the usual click-bait bs, I'd bet that very few readers would check out after only 300 words. Readers know when a topic/issue actually MEANS something, and when an essay writer is honestly and genuinely grappling with it.