Quote Originally Posted by CoccoBill View Post
I was merely trying to point out that the ones saying "don't fix what ain't fundamentally broken" are often on the wrong side of history.
Do you know how many times someone has tried to fix something they thought was broken and failed? Communism springs to mind.

So, I am pointing out that being able to describe how something is fundamentally broken and how the putative replacement fixes that problem without introducing a whole new set of problems is a necessary precursor to taking steps to replace/fix it. Just saying it's broken and asking others to take that on faith doesn't cut it.