We consider a model with Lorentz-violating vector field condensates, in which
dispersion laws of all perturbations, including tensor modes, undergo
non-trivial modification in the infrared. The model is free of ghosts and
tachyons at high 3-momenta. At low 3-momenta there are ghosts, and at even
lower 3-momenta there exist tachyons. Still, with appropriate choice of
parameters, the model is phenomenologically acceptable. Beyond a certain large
distance scale and even larger time scale, the gravity of a static source
changes from that of General Relativity to that of van Dam--Veltman--Zakharov
limit of the Fierz--Pauli theory. Yet the late time cosmological evolution is
always determined by the standard Friedmann equation, modulo small correction
to the ``cosmological Planck mass'', so the modification of gravity cannot by
itself explain the accelerated expansion of the Universe. We argue that the
latter property is generic in a wide class of models with condensates.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, JHEP3.cls; Added reference