I'm not just talking about the trades, of course. Just look back on our recent exchange. You said the long term concerns for the health of the organization were already there when they signed the core. So you have a huge question to ask regarding whether that's smart at all if you have questions about the organization, which the core is the most important aspect, at least at the major league level. When it happened, all we heard was that they could build around this core and have a winning team throughout these contracts. That's what they believed. That's what they sold us AND (more important) the core on.
One year changed all that. They decided to blow it up and aim for the magical 2017. When they traded Heyward and signed Markakis, it looked like they might've just decided to grab Markakis and use Heyward to fill a need in the rotation. It had the promise of a plan. For a week or three we were just a few pieces away from fixing the weaknesses exposed during 2014. Then it went full rebuild with another questionable (in light of the full rebuild) signing and the indecision had cost us value in the Upton trade and had saddled the magical 2017 team with a 34-year-old outfielder who is already showing signs of aging. That spot could've been used to see what some of our prospect outfielders can do. To see what we have and don't have before the magical 2017. And the money could've been used after the 2016 season to fill any remaining holes before moving to the new stadium. Most of the strengths of 2014 are gone. The weaknesses are still here with a few more added because of indecision or misjudgment or whatever you want to call it. So some of us look at it that way and have a hard time just accepting that an organization with so many recent bad decisions is making a good one in regards to the Mukaki Rebuild. Recent history suggests that they are not.