Before we get any to name calling let's just get back to the situation. First, how many million dollar construction projects are stopped by an injunction. Happens all the time and they have lawyers too. Sometimes powerful people push the envelope because they want something not because they think they have the contractual rights. Usually it's because they know that they can pay them off, or force a deal because they are more powerful not more in the right. I want this to happen, it is for the betterment of the cubs long term. I also think it's better for the rooftop and neighborhood people to get something now to try to have some relevance in the future rather than fight to keep those 11 years and be out in the cold at that time. The sooner the cubs get this done, the better it is for us. Hey, I hope they win with no fight at all. less money spent on this, more money spent on the club hopefully. I am trying to argue any points here, I simply don't know what the actual contract says and I pretty sure other than a snippet from the paper, no one here knows exactly what the thing says either. I'm sure it's many,many pages of legal jumbo and while that small part from the paper sounds good, we have no idea the entire context it comes in. My thought on this is I can't imagine business entities of this size and value would be so careless to not protect their businesses for the length of that contract. That would be beyond bad judgement. I also said that it would be stupid to play the hard line role on this, if it was so simple for the cubs and the city to do this. That is almost as bad. To me it seems that the rooftops certainly feel they have something to stand on over this.