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nella palude
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I agree. I don't rewatch episodes, but I remember how much I loved the premier and how much I enjoyed marathoning the first season. Ever since it's more frustration than enjoyment, though there have been some good episodes. It's just so darn uneven.

I assumed it was a crack.

I can't wait until Ron catches his mom kissing Rick and has a meltdown. I can feel the angst already. With any luck he'll try to shoot Rick, and Rick will bite Ron's throat out. That's something I'd like to see.

We can only hope.

Yes! The sewer zombies were the highlight of the episode.

Deanna sure drafts a mean city plan though. Alfalfa, wheat, corn, little buildings, underline this, circle that. What would the Alexandrians do without this engineering mastermind.

I thought Deanna was taking the supplies back to the pantry…

Good point. I guess I was thinking the scenes with Morgan and the Wolf were maybe further into the future. I wonder how Morgan got the keys to the prison house? (I assume it's the prison house because it was all reinforced on the outside, but maybe I'm wrong). It'll be interesting to see how this situation plays

If Eastman had a baby, I would argue that his primary moral responsibility would be towards his child's safety and wellbeing. I don't know if he would necessarily have to kill Morgan, but inviting him in for inpatient rehab would be foolish and irresponsible. So we'll have to agree to disagree on that one.

Which is what Tara's character was all about.

Oh, I was talking about Morgan, but I agree with you 100% about Gabriel. I don't blame Carol one bit for not risking her life to save him. I actually think at this point he deserves to be put in jail, but I guess we'll see.

The Wolves attack innocent people who are minding their own business. Carol is nothing like that. She is ruthless when it comes to the protection of her people, and she will euthanize you if you're sick with a deadly contagion, but she doesn't kill for power, enrichment, or pleasure.

No, I'm not saying he should have killed Morgan, especially since Eastman was alone with no group or vulnerable individuals to protect. Eastman's decisions affect only himself. But I wouldn't condemn him if he HAD killed Morgan, if Morgan kept creeping around his house with his gun the way he did, ignoring Eastman's

Very true. Remember individualism is a modern western concept, it never emerged as an ideal until our society was wealthy and stable enough to support it, and even then it's still really only found in western culture. In TWD universe, society has regressed to anarchy and chaos, and resources are scarce. In those

I don't think Dale or Herschel were against killing in self-defence, were they?(I might be wrong, my memory is terrible). They were more like voice-of-conscious old timers, questioning things and playing devil's advocate. Whereas Morgan's outright refusal to kill is putting the group in jeopardy. I guess Herschel was

Exactly. His intentions are honourable, but when push comes to shove Morgan can't be trusted to defend the group against attack. I think of it this way- if I were Judith's mother and I had to leave her in the care of either Carol or Morgan, it'd be a no brainer, Carol all the way.

I hope Morgan isn't keeping that Wolf prisoner in the prison house without Rick's knowledge, because that would strain my suspension of disbelief. I really hope Rick knows about it and plans to get information out him before killing him. And I really REALLY hope that if they kill him, it's done matter-of-factly with

In a theoretical situation where all civilization has collapsed, it's suicidal not to eliminate unrepentantly violent and dangerous individuals who threaten the safety of your group. Doing that does not make a person "no longer human"- our ancestors did it for tens of thousands of years, up to and including the time

Yep, and if the storyline goes that way I think realizing what he's done might cause Morgan to snap and go into crazy killer mode again.

Can't wait to see him sitting in his cell surrounded by bags of mail, reading the love letters they send him.