I remember my wife and I on one trip was riding the monorail and that thing snakes through the properties as it makes it's way up and down the strip.
This was a summertime trip and when the monorail passed the pools of the Flamingo you can see what seems like millions of day partiers, standing, dancing, and peeing shoulder to shoulder in the pools. Millions others on lounge chairs, at poolside bars, and in cabanas. The pool scenes were vibrant, the music pumping, the crowds all red faced, drunk, with shit-grins, the pool water turning a mysterious greenish hue.......

Anyway, what I'm getting at is these people are the mid-tier type of visitors. The so-called bread and butter revenue source that would keep the lights on, the AC running, and the pool scene profitable.
If the bean counters truly crunched the numbers and claim they can rely on the 10% or less that are considered "Whales", without the mid tier visitors, it seems like a large portion of the revenue the whales bring will now have to go to upkeep those pools, slot machines, and empty food halls that most likely will be ghost towns now.
I've said it many times before. I don't understand how this can be sustainable but I'm not the expert. Hotels laying off employees, restaurants laying off workers, dealers with no jobs, etc. will equal no ability to keep house mortgage payments, pay for food, medical, transportation.
People will start migrating to where there are jobs. Laughlin? Reno? Out of state?
This could snowball even into the local casino business. A lot of the locals that patronize local casinos are employees of the Strip and Downtown properties. No job. No patronage. Bye bye local casinos.
Lets face it. The majority of people working in Las Vegas work in the hospitality industry. If not that the construction industry that services that sector. Weaken the foundation of these two contributors to the Vegas economy and you can see a collapse and a mass exodus from a once vibrant and thriving city.