I think Fisher and the executive committee is completely misrepresenting the majority position. Most players would take the current deal and that's why Fisher won't let them vote on it. Imo, the majority of the 450 or so NBA players couldn't care less about the remaining system issues since they would never apply to them.
But Fisher is not representing the average NBA player's interest, he is representing the elite few, and clearly those players get more say. So the union is willing to even further compromise on the BRI split, which affects every NBA player and especially affects those without big endorsement deals or not playing in big markets to offset the salary loss, so that the few higher-priced players can always have the option of forcing their way onto a big market team without sacrificing any salary.
But Fisher is not representing the average NBA player's interest, he is representing the elite few, and clearly those players get more say. So the union is willing to even further compromise on the BRI split, which affects every NBA player and especially affects those without big endorsement deals or not playing in big markets to offset the salary loss, so that the few higher-priced players can always have the option of forcing their way onto a big market team without sacrificing any salary.