Okay, I lied, I wasn't done.
Oct. 8th, 2006 02:46 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
1. Kara is locked up.
2. Sharon was locked up.
3. Kara has *lost it*. I mean, did you see her face after she killed Leoben for the umpteenth time?
4. Sharon hasn't lost it. She seems more sane than ever.
5. After the kidlet almost dies due to Kara's not watching her (totally agreed on, by the way), she's acting more friendly towards Leoben - holding his hand and all. This may be a ploy, or it may be the first signs of Stockholm Syndrome. Who knows?
6. Sharon is giving long speeches about forgiveness, moving on, and not staying in the past. This may be genuine, or it too may be Stockholm Syndrome. However, as we're primed to support the human side, we're going to trust her emotions a lot, while the same exact stuff coming from Kara would make us fear for her remaining sanity.
So, what's the moral here? Keeping people in cages eventually works? I'm not sure I agree with the turn this has taken.
2. Sharon was locked up.
3. Kara has *lost it*. I mean, did you see her face after she killed Leoben for the umpteenth time?
4. Sharon hasn't lost it. She seems more sane than ever.
5. After the kidlet almost dies due to Kara's not watching her (totally agreed on, by the way), she's acting more friendly towards Leoben - holding his hand and all. This may be a ploy, or it may be the first signs of Stockholm Syndrome. Who knows?
6. Sharon is giving long speeches about forgiveness, moving on, and not staying in the past. This may be genuine, or it too may be Stockholm Syndrome. However, as we're primed to support the human side, we're going to trust her emotions a lot, while the same exact stuff coming from Kara would make us fear for her remaining sanity.
So, what's the moral here? Keeping people in cages eventually works? I'm not sure I agree with the turn this has taken.