I have considered it. I've stated clearly that I understand the strategic reasons for tanking. I also understand why teams do it. I've conceded that the existing incentive system incentivizes tanking. I question, however, it's efficacy, depending on what one's goals are. I'm also skeptical that it's the only or necessarily best solution teams have combined with the existing conventional wisdom/group think that accepts tanking as the "de facto" strategy as received fact. I also question it's costs vs. its benefits, including to long-suffering fan bases who are required to put up with season after season of purposeful losing and to the league as a whole in terms of its popularity, credibility, and integrity. As a fan, I want to be entertained. Purposively putting a lousy product on the floor is not entertaining. I'm not sure that 5 years of sucking are worth 5-6 years, or whatever it is, of being relevant. Finally, I am critical of the championship or bust (i.e., Ringz Culture) that dominates today's NBA discourse and strategic thinking. I would rather watch entertaining, competitive, meaningful basketball year after year, even if it doesn't lead to a title, than purposefully losing for several years in exchange for a modest, at best, increase in the odds of winning a title.
With all that said, tanking is the world we currently live in. I suspect one of two things, or both, are going to happen. 1) Teams are going to reassess the efficacy of tanking and its costs to the franchise and fanbase and will get more creative in team-building strategy, and 2) the league will intervene to disincentivize tanking. Received wisdom is constantly shifting, people innovate, and rules change. We'll see. I've no crystal ball. If I did, I'd be making a helluva lot more money than I currently am.