Houdi, some fair points from you too.
There are undoubtedly many things that Wasps do very well, not least the matchday experience which I hear is excellent and well managed. They've actually figured out that when people go to games they'll want to be welcomed and probably want to spend money on food and drink whilst they are there! I would that our owners had figured that out...
Again, and this isn't intended to be provocative, the fact is that Wasps currently aren't profitable and they've got a £35m bond floating over them. Putting aside all opinions regarding them being here, the point I'd make is that I don't think that's a particularly solid business model.
In many ways, I can draw a parallel with what's happening with Premiership Rugby at the moment and what happened to FL football at the time of ITV Digital. In essence BT are pumping money into something that isn't a global brand, and that actually attracts quite small levels of viewing figures (around 150,000 when compared to Premier League Football, 1,500,000+). When ITV Digital went under it also buried a number of clubs who had banked on that TV money. If BT Sport ever pulls the plug then it's bound to have an impact on rugby in the same way, and it's always the most leveraged clubs that go first. At £35m, Wasps are hugely leveraged.
The other thing is that even if the bandwagon keeps rolling, we've seen that top-level football clubs can still manage to blow it all trying to keep up (Portsmouth, Leeds, etc). As wages start to spiral in Rugby, I'm not sure that the lesson has been learned - and the gap from top-flight rugby to the other divisions is even bigger than it is in football, so the fall is even harder. Example: London Welsh established 1885, relegated from the top-flight in 2015, liquidated in 2016.
Anyway mate, just a long-winded way of saying that however well Wasps appear to be doing, and completely regardless of the rights and wrongs of them being here, I politely differ on the financial side. In absolutely honesty I wouldn't be putting money into the club as an investment vehicle, which I think is always the acid test for these things.