I think there's a lot of anger and frustration being directed at the RFU and PRL and probably unfairly (IMO).
Our plan hasn't worked out; some would suggest it was incompetence others believe it was a good plan that hasn't worked out. Almost all of the naysayers reckon a better plan was a sugar daddy + rent a stadium in London. Hardly a grand masterplan, zero long-term potential of sustainability.
Irish bleed cash, Saracens have had their debt wiped by a generous previous owner and have had a fresh-start and now operating a model that is a smaller scale of ours; multiple income streams. Quins are based in the beating heart of UK Rugby Union, regularly sell-out the stadium they own and play entertaining rugby but still don't consistently make a profit or break even.
There has been little discussion from fans around how Professional Rugby should be run in the past 5+ years, so to blame PRL now seems harsh - Even if, with hindsight, they should have done something about this sooner and perhaps COVID should have been the catalyst to accelerate change beyond just reducing the salary cap.
It's fair to suggest that should PRL effectively allow us to shed our debt, keep our P-Share and bounce back up, it would be unfair on the other teams. I totally accept that it feels to non-Saracens fans that they were treated generously. But they haven't really had a material effect on our issues (salary inflation aside, but as per the Walder in The Telegraph thread, that's not a big figure in the grand scheme of things).