Yeah two schools of thought definitely.
The play without fear mantra that has followed Potter around wherever he goes, shows that he won't be inflicting any morale-sapping comments to anyone who try and fail.
I suspect the long term view is that developing a squad, who have a good siege-mentality "us against the world" creates a squad who are only valuable to us.
A squad who are developed to reach their own individual potential creates players who will be valued by other clubs more highly and ensure that the club achieves the necessary return on investment to be able to compete at this level.
Another thought-provoking post.
Yep, I can well see that that assessment may be correct - it would certainly chime in nicely with other aspects of TBs approach; it's all about the long-term.
It follows logically that we will continue to see younger and younger Albion squads (though there is of course a limit!) as the younger a player is, the more scope there is to increase their potential, thus realising a better ROI. Over time, the quality of the younger players bought increases (as you have more cash available to buy them), until you reach the nirvana of finishing in, err, the top ten on a consistent basis.
Yep, I can buy that as a hypothesis.