I look at the fractured streets littered with broken promises peeling billboards peddling luxury to the wrong audience the contorted vertebrae of this country's spine and I mourn the death of the American Dream. I see it lying at my feet with every step like the broken-winged bird from childhood fables. "Fix me," she wheezes. I tried once, but it died in my hands. Apparently, "The Dream" used to be two cars but now it's two good fists the wisdom to know when enough is enough and the strength to say it. I was born too late to remember anything else. Here lies the American Dream, bruised and battered by those who vowed to protect her doused in oil and set aflame by misdirection misdemeanors and Miss Universe. Here lies the American Dream who was born from revolution and died in its absence who waited for a day that never came who lived long enough to see the fruit of her labor become a raisin in the sun.