People's priorities are a tough one. I see plenty of young families in my line of work whose priorities are simply wrong. Pouring money into pubs, football tickets, latest phones,sky subscriptions, fast foot, etc whilst their kids wear shoes to school with holes in (literally), have atrocious diets or suggest they can't afford to wash their clothes every week (yes, this has been said). Knocks me sick. Whether it's to do with uneducation, unawareness a lack or caring is irrelevant. There's a case to be made about people's right to choose for themselves how they spend 'their' money, but there's a case to be made about some people needing to be dictated to about what their priorities have to be. I know there are many who do well with little but sadly this isn't always the situation; this is why blanket rules don't work, why there'll be complaints either way and why nothing will change.
How football financially changes will be interesting though. Will TV subs be increased so that clubs can make up partly for loss of ticket revenue? Probably not, and people are already stretched financially, but don't underestimate the greed of broadcasters and club owners.
On a different note:
Some clubs seem very against the idea of playing at neutral stadiums with no fans...Can someone explain to me the benefits of a home stadium when there's no home support? At the end of the day, a stadium is a patch of grass with four sides. It's the fans which make the difference between home and away primarily. The only other consideration I could think of is players' travelling to and from the stadiums, but then I thought the whole idea was the blitz out the games quickly and they'd all be isolated from non-football people anyway so going home wouldn't be an option either