If an individual putting money into a club is "very wrong" how would you describe an elitist group pressuring the rulemakers of the game into pushing through changes in order to benefit the group at the expense of everyone else and competitiveness in general?
Arsenal are in a decent position now to push on almost solely because of the change in format for the CL, a response to the oft-threatened breakaway "Super League" (a change that would literally destroy domestic and international football)
Wenger views 4th as a trophy, and even more important than a trophy, why? because it pretty much guarantees Arsenal keeping their status - something that was not guaranteed to clubs in the past. In the past a club could finish 2nd, 3rd or 4th one year and fight relegation the next, why? because there wasn't a big difference in finishing 4th or finishing 14th. Nearly 10 years on from winning a trophy (in the past a barometer for success) and yet Arsenal are still up there relatively cosy - a pretty rare situation in the past. This "Sugar" from the G14-UEFA "Daddy" is the biggest problem with modern day football.
In comparison, moaning about loans etc is like worrying about a crease in your spacesuit as you fly towards a blackhole
If you were making a case for the likes of Dinamo Bucarest or Levski Sofia being Champions in Romania and Bulgaria respectively, and still having to go through tough playoff qualifiers before reaching the Champions League, then you would have a point.
But why do you guys put all of the burden on teams like Arsenal, of the infamous so-called G14, putting pressure on a poor little organisation as defenseless as UEFA? As if they didn't have a choice but to give in to their demands. As if they had nothing to gain from this 'bloated' version of the Champions League that encompasses 2nd and even 3rd placed teams from the major leagues without the need for playoff matches.
But since I know you're just trying to compare how bad this situation is in relation to billionaire Oil moguls taking over football clubs to play football manager in real life, then I have to say you're wrong.
You're downplaying Arsenal and Wenger's achievements when you say they're in a 'cosy' situation of playing CL every year and maintaining that status. It isn't as simple as that. Arsenal has been there every year for the past 17 years, and this is an awful lot, but it doesn't come easy as it seems. Liverpool was a 'Top 4 status' club in England, yet they had somehow lost their status. Why didn't they keep qualifying every year if it's so darn easy to? If there is such a disparity between CL and non-CL clubs? What about Tottenham, who had 2 Champions League adventures, but failed to build on that and now seems uncapable of returning to the Champions League?
It's not as easy as it looks for a club that isn't run with limitless funds. It is particularly impressive that Arsenal has been achieving it in the last 6-7 years with significant financial constraints. Only now the club has the stadium debt almost paid up, with new sponsorship contracts kicking in.
But I know only too well that it doesn't matter all the hard work done at Arsenal - despite all the effort to elevate the club to another level, all it takes is Sheikh Mansur or Abramovich to up the ante and spend a tad more from their back pockets to price even a wealthier Arsenal out of the market (not to mention the smaller clubs).
So, to answer your question: yes, an individual (or group from the Middle East) injecting money into clubs is far more damaging to football than the older form of domination.
Before we used to have a systematic thing, which authorities could understand and control if only they wanted to. Now, with sugar daddies we have chaos.
It's chaotic because they don't give a shit about the rules. UEFA tries to put them on a leash, prohibiting 'donations' from the owners to their clubs, and the next thing you know, Etihad Airways (owned by relatives of Man City owners) announce an outrageous, record-breaking sponsorship for naming rights to the stadium in the sum of 400m for 10 years. They make a mockery of the whole damn thing, that's what they do.
Please do tell me when the hell is the fabled Financial Fair Play thing kick in, because we've been seeing none of that nonsense up to now.
I can't, for the life of me, see how the old UEFA-induced G-14 is worse to football than the sugar daddies that are taking over, throwing untold amounts of money at clubs and skewing the market.
If anything, they've allowed a two-fold division (a dog-eat-dog model) to turn into 3 different classes of clubs: the overnight billionaires, the ones who got rich through UEFA in the 90s and 00s, and the underdogs.
It's the dog-eat-dog model turning into T-Rex eating both big and small dogs.