Help me, Vikings fans. I'm not sure where to stand in the debate between Gov. Mark Dayton and Vikings owner Zygi Wilf.One guy wants to gouge you. The other wants to protect you.
One guy is Mr. Potter. The other is George Bailey.
One guy is a walking "convenience" fee. The other is a Groupon.
Do I side with the guy who wants you to buy a Personal Seat License, otherwise known as That Thing They Made Up To Charge You More Money For That Thing They Were Already Charging You Money For, or the guy who thinks that when you buy an expensive ticket for a seat in a stadium, you shouldn't also have to buy a expensive ticket to have the right to buy an expensive ticket for a seat in a stadium?
Do I side with the billionaire owner who got a sweetheart deal for a new stadium in downtown Minneapolis and who now wants to charge fans thousands of excess dollars so he won't wind up investing his personal fortune in a venture that will make him even richer? Or the public servant who thinks that's wrong?
Dayton is pro-stadium for good reason. Cities are buildings. The nicer we can make the buildings that the public most often uses, the nicer our cities will be. No stadium deals are perfect, but Target Field and Xcel Energy Center are beautiful places. They are essential to our cities remaining places where people want to live and socialize.
Dayton fought for the Vikings stadium for all the right reasons, and now he is opposing Wilf for all of the right reasons.
You can argue that Dayton could have foreseen this development, that he is now arguing against the language of the very deal he signed. That's true.