I bought resale post 2011. I carefully evaluated and determined that the things blocked from me as a resale buyer were poor uses of points.
If I were considering buying resale for the first time today, this would be a deal breaker.
Not because of the perks. I discussed on the first page of this long long thread how to end run this via a minimum buy in.
No. The issue is the concept of tiered ownership, real second class status in a way that 2011 wasn't.
We're basically at a philosophical impasse here.
I was around in 2011 and read many of the same comments. Believe it or not, many vocal members asserted that the 2011 restrictions would cause irreparable harm to resale values. Today resale values are as high as ever.
You admit that the 2011 restrictions had no impact on YOUR purchase decision, yet these 2016 restrictions create a "real second class status." I would simply propose that an overwhelming number of potential owners will not share that opinion.
Just about every consumer product we could name features additional perks and protections if bought "new" from the manufacturer or one of its agents. Houses, cars, electronics, appliances...if you buy at retail, you receive a level of quality and service. Buyers who elect to buy second-hand (thrift store, used car lot, eBay, buying a house from previous owner) typically should not expect those same perks or benefits from the original manufacturer.
In a few weeks or months, this will be the new norm. People who newly discover Disney Vacation Club will never have known a time when resale buyers received discounts on APs and meals.
Some will use this policy as fuel for their decision to not buy into
DVC. But that's nothing new--many have contemplated DVC over the years and decided against it for a variety of reasons.
At the end of the day, a 25-pt add-on is all it takes to secure the perks. The added cost of those 25 direct points is maybe $1000-1500, depending on specifics. A buyer who sees the AP discounts and member events as a benefit knows they'll make up that difference in a couple years. This is probably where DVC stands to gain the most from this policy change.
Those who don't see the value in perks will stick with the resale points and never give it a second thought.