Let me just offer an observation here.
A number of people have commented that they weren't much surprised by Sinclair being taken aboard, because on the nets -- and this has ONLY taken place on the nets -- this speculation has been bandied about for some time. We now have ten zillion speculations on the reason *why*. I will not comment on them one way or another (though I suppose I could point, without making the real comparison between types of typists, to the idea that an infinte number of monkeys typing on an infinite number of keyboards would eventually produce Hamlet simply by chance combination; sooner or later, something close to the reality might be stumbled upon...and let me ask a simple question: what purpose does that serve? It only lessens the enjoyment of those who would simply like to enjoy what happens WHEN it happens).
Any good detective knows that you can't really begin to speculate about motive until you have all the information right at hand. At this point there is information you don't have...and absent that, any guesses will either be wrong, or close enough to hinder the fun but still essentially incorrect. It's like trying to guess the contents of a box without knowing the size of the box...it could be a marble, it could be an elephant or a pre-fabricated house.
All I'm suggesting is that you consider not trying to come up with every possible angle, and let the show progress on its own. Right now everybody seems to be scrambling to make sure every even remotely feasible possibility is covered, and there an infinite number. As an organized activity, this will in time only prove frustrating. By the end of the season, as with being near the end of a movie, you'll have enough info on hand to start making some educated guesses. To do so now is to begin the process of calling out possible endings during the first five minutes of a movie...you'll miss the important things, and annoy the people sitting behind you.
I'm not saying stop; I'm just saying...relax, a little, I guess, and simply be aware that you *cannot* scatter-shot this thing without having access to all the information. It's like trying to guess the beginnings of World War One without knowing *any* of the background of the countries involved. Suffice to say that the reason would not be simplistic, or cliched, or *easily deduced*. One thing I learned in two years on "Murder, She Wrote" was to come up with a fairly complex mystery, something that can't be easily solved going in, but which makes perfect sense after you have all the facts and know which clues were the real ones, and which were simply red herrings.
Just a thought....
jms |
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