This is what these infinity loop rebuilds end up fostering.
All the teams that end up coming out of rebuilds ahead of the pack are the ones that slow role out their prospects, give them time to dominate at lower levels, maybe even give them a Calder run or two as a group and then bring 3-4 guys into a positive space with some solid veterans and coaching.
While I think Laine's sort of a dick for saying this, because he was 100% part of the problem in Columbus, he's not wrong that a lot of these perma-rebuild teams are constantly looking at the draft and the next season 35 games into the season. It makes long seasons longer, and it doesn't foster that 'we need to learn how to win' attitude. I said it in another thread, but that's why it's so important to hold onto good players. I know in rebuilds you want to suck so bad you get a first overall and life gets easier... but climbing out of that despair takes so much time when you're down to nothing.
That culture has to change at some point, and it has to be brought in by young guys who know how to win, and veterans who can play meaningful minutes while also knowing how to win. I really don't care how much character your 4th line LW has, he's playing 9 minutes a night. You need your top 6 and top 4 to have that professional edge to them.