Bender said:
If we use this analogy we could really go down the rabbit hole, but...
I just dont think it's really useful to complain about the furnace five years later. Instead wouldn't it be better to discuss where we go from here now that it happened? How to ensure that the fire doesn't happen again and what kind of value we can get from the new house?
Well, two things. One, in a way you're right. It's not particularly useful to complain about anything. That said, if you're going to spend your time on a sports website scanning the discussions for signs of utility I think you're in for a long haul. I've engaged in some pretty good long form yammerings back and forth here full of number crunching and analysis with some people who I consider to be pretty smart but even at the very heights of these Leafs-related discussions I don't know how useful they are. They're engaging and enlightening, to me anyway, and I like discussing the team very much but I don't think they solve much. Does saying "Man, the Kessel trade sucked" provide anything to the person who says it? I don't know. Maybe it's cathartic somehow. Not every post, however, can be "we rule man" or "we suck dudes" which does provide a pretty good degree of utility to people who can't watch the game but are watching the board to see who scores.
Regardless, again, it's just a natural state of life regardless of what analogy you want to use. If you blow a tire on your car, do you talk about the all of the parts of your car that did work? Even if it's a discussion concerning the future and the lessons you can learn from failed efforts, again, you're going to spend more time analyzing what went wrong than what went right because what went right is largely self-evident and doesn't need repeating.
I like to think I consume a pretty good amount of Leafs related media and I'd say that most of what I hear about the Kessel trade doesn't qualify as simply "complaining" but rather how it factors into both what went wrong and what's continuing to go wrong for the team.