Nurse the Hate: The Comeback City
I live in America's Comeback City TM. I know this because the mass media has been telling me so. These proclamations coincidentally bubble up to the surface on the slight rise of fortune of our various sports franchises. For example, I first learned Cleveland was "coming back" in the early 1990s when the Indians constructed a baseball team that bludgeoned all comers. Well, until they got to the Series. We must have stopped "coming back" for awhile as the next time we "came back" was when the Browns returned in 1999 like a bad case of chlamydia. I thought we had come all the way back in 2007 when the Cavs went to the Finals and got whipped by the Spurs, but it turned out that we came back for sure this year as our prodigal son LeBron has led us to elusive glory. It was on the Today Show this morning. It must be true. Whew. It's good to be back.
You
can imagine my surprise yesterday as I hit a pothole on 1-490 that
jarred me as if I had been hit while returning a punt against the 1972
USC Trojans. I would have expected that a city that has indeed "come
back" as we have would have soft silky roads that were like driving on
cotton candy. Instead I had been herded into one of the three
functioning lanes into The Comeback City. I found it odd that this highway lane had
yet to have any repairs done to it as of June 3. We must have "come
back" so fast that we forgot that a two foot deep hole is located in a
spot where cars drive over it at high speed. Now, Cleveland used to have more
lanes, but the political graft money used to repair our rusting
infrastructure had yet to open more than one lane on the main artery
into town. This is sort of surprising as this road project has been
going on slightly longer than the time it took to build the Great
Pyramids. However, before I become critical of the pace of labor, I
should remember that the Pharaohs had slave labor while The Comeback
City has guys that smoke cigarettes and look around while wearing their
neon safety vests. The Union frowns on "example killings" to move
projects along as I understand it. My grasp of labor regulations is
admittedly shoddy.
I
immediately got a flat tire. This sucked as I was driving about 453
mph. I do have "run flat" tires so I was able to continue without
cartwheeling off the highway in flames. As I made the turn into the
city with my tire beginning to make a "flap flap flap" sound I thought
"what a golden age I live in here in The Comeback City. It's as if I
live in Paris in the 1920s.". I made for the east 18th street exit as I
knew there was a tire dealer two blocks away. I was filled with joy as
I gazed upon the billboard for the Horseshoe Casino, my car lazily
steering off the highway.
The
Horseshoe Casino is yet another blessing we have in The Comeback City.
In our wisdom, we decided to allow the man that owns the basketball
team that he purchased through profits of predatory lending and mortgage
default swaps to have a monopoly on games of chance in the State of
Ohio. The Comeback City also built him an arena downtown which we all
also pay to keep up to date so as to allow folks to pay up to $21,000 to sit
in a folding chair to watch a basketball game. It's a nice system that
works well for everyone as it has allowed our city to "come back".
There are also going to be a windfall of profits from the casino that
will enrich all of our lives, but so far all I have seen are scary bums
in Public Square that hover like a pack of jackals looking for wounded
antelope. I probably just need to be patient. We are "coming back"
after all...
I
must have been lost in thought when I struck another pothole off of
the 18th street exit. This was also a shocking impact. Amazingly, this
flattened my other front tire and made my dashboard explode with
warning lights. It must have been 37 seconds since I had gotten the
first flat. As I limped the car another block to the tire dealer with two flat tires, I
thought "I have never been more proud of this city I call home. I
cannot wait for the trumpets of triumph when the Republican National
Convention slithers into town next year." By then, some temporary road
system will be hastily set up providing the false impression that the city
has spent its money wisely on infrastructure and not on some fools gold
like a basketball arena, football stadium, baseball scoreboard or downtown three
card Monti shack.
As we prepare the start this NBA Finals series, I look forward to receiving more information on how the city has indeed "come back". Granted, I will be a little light in the wallet after paying for two bent rims, two new run flat tires, a new muffler, and God Knows What Else, but there is no reason to worry about money. That is a concern of the past, of the Old Cleveland. Today might just have been the day we came all the way back. Someone let me know. I have to go see if my car is repaired.
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