I was being facetious...
L.A. is such a mess that I don't see any team there, even with how bad the league wants one (or two) there.
Besides, back in 2002 when they did the realignment I said they should put Baltimore in our division and Miami in the AFC South (with Indy in the AFC North) and Pats fans done lost their minds that I would even THINK about not having the Fiends in our division.
It's funny, I was just talking with someone yesterday and saying that even though I would not want it to happen from a competitive standpoint, the Ravens really belongs in the AFC East.
From a geographic standpoint - which fosters more regional rivalry, and better allows fans to make road trips to see their favorite team play each and every tear - Miami should move from the AFCE to the AFCS; Indianapolis should move from the AFCS to the AFCN; and Baltimore should move from the AFCN to the AFCE.
From a business standpoint I do understand why this did not happen when the NFL expanded to eight divisions, though I don't agree with the decision. The NFL wanted to keep what was still left of the AFL East together, so the Dolphins remained in that division.
The Colts were not a strong team at the time, and they had already bounced from the NFL to the AFC, and from Baltimore to Indy; they had no strong rivalries at that point so they were one of those nomads sacrificed to form a new division.
The irony (or hypocrisy) of the NFL's realignment had to do with the old and new Cleveland franchises. The league decided that all records for the Browns would remain in Cleveland, and pretend the team never left (I guess they were just hibernating when there was no NFL team at The Mistake On The Lake). Keeping a rivalry between relatively close rust belt cities (Pittsburgh and Cleveland) made sense, but they also wanted to keep the rivalry between the fans that followed the old Browns/new Ravens and the Steelers alive. Not only that but the NFL wanted to capitalize on an old Browns/new Browns rivalry - even though officially they acted as if the Ravens never played in Cleveland.
Of course none of that compares to the far more blatant special treatment that the Cowboys received to remain in the NFCE; how can one justify a team from Dallas being in a division with three teams from the northeast?. The funny thing is that with how revenue sharing has made playing in a division full of other big market teams not that big of a deal from a financial perspective, Jerry Jones would never agree to a realignment because of his ego; it might mean that his 8-8 Cowboys are not on national television quite so often.
If the league really wanted to do it right they would move the Cowboys to the NFCS, and generate a rivalry with the Saints; Carolina could take their place in the NFCE.