In regards to the system issues the owners are seeking, I'll say this. If it comes down to small market teams keeping their player, or the players having the right to seek employment wherever they wish (free from overreaching restrictions), I'll always side with the players on that.
Quite frankly, an individuals ability to work where they want is more important to me.
I can respect that, though I wholeheartedly disagree with you. I view the NBA as one business with many separate parts. The players have the freedom to choose to play in the NBA, or in another basketball league. But the NBA, and the teams that comprise it, need to have a lot of control over player movement so that competition in the league isn't a joke.
Besides that though, these small market teams are full of it anyway. Last time I checked, San Antonio has 4 titles in the last 10 or so years. Indiana, Sacramento, Portland, and Cleveland (just to name a few small markets) have also had success to a certain level. Small markets are not unable to succeed. They just have to have good management. What makes that any different than a large market team?
The difference is that even when the small market teams are successful, they often don't make much of a profit, if any at all. All of the teams you mentioned have suffered serious financial problems despite (and often because of) their success. Small market teams have to decide between not losing money and becoming and remaining successful. Big market teams don't have to face that dilemma at all.
If anything, San Antonio is the exception that proves the rule -- and they aren't even always profitable from year to year despite their continued excellence of the last decade.
Last time I checked, the largest market team of them all (Knicks) hasn't won a title in 30+ years.
That's because they've had some bad luck and also been horribly, horribly mismanaged. Well managed big market teams have absolutely dominated the league over the course of its existence (Lakers, Celtics, Bulls and to a lesser extent the Sixers).
It is about nothing other than control. Owners feel as if "the inmates are running the asylum". What really is happening is players are just simply using their freedom of "right to choose where to work" to pick spots they desire (something any human would do).
If you don't like it (as an owner), make your destination more desirable (and I don't mean artifically price-fixing the market). Otherwise, too bad.
Again, I can respect that you feel this way based on your values, but I completely disagree. It's not as simple as you say for owners to make their markets desirable (players aren't going to want to play in Minnesota no matter how well run the team is), and I think the league is better and more fun to watch when general managers have a lot of control over building their team.
That way you can really say that who wins is about who builds the best group of players, not who has the nicest city and the biggest pockets.