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shyguy
05-30-2008, 12:42 AM
Charlie, you have to die so that Claire and Aaron can get rescued! bah!

lostnthesoutheast
05-30-2008, 12:44 AM
Yeah, that doesn't sit well with me either. I assume that we have probably now seen the last of Desmond (since he has his happy ending) so we may never know whether or not he lied to Charlie delibertly or not.

Jack Sawyer
05-30-2008, 12:45 AM
Can you really blame Desmond for lying? He wanted to see Penny again and this has-been rocker was going to die anyways...as much as I like Desmond, I think that's pretty much how it went down in his mind. Poor Charlie.

ManOfScience6
05-30-2008, 12:45 AM
Yeah I'm still trying to figure that out. What ever happened to his flashes? They suddenly stopped, or was Desmond making up the whole thing?

shyguy
05-30-2008, 12:48 AM
I don't know what the writers are thinking, but Charlies death was pointless.

Honbun26
05-30-2008, 12:52 AM
You are assuming that Desmond saw Claire get on Frank's helicopter. Desmond never said who else he saw getting on the helicopter besides Claire and Aaron. Perhaps, after the O6 get back, Claire and Aaron get on a helicopter at that point.

Before you blast TPTB for errors, sit back and wait to see how things play out.

Noeland
05-30-2008, 01:07 AM
Charlie's death was a long way from being pointless. And Desmond saw LOTS of things that he prevented, he saw Charlie die in all manner of ways, and none of those things came to pass. Perhaps if the island had not stepped in and Christian taking her away, then she would have gotten on the chopper.

I don't know, just seems like this isn't really worth getting so stuck on. Desmond saw lot of visions and most of them didn't come to pass how he saw them.

angelsflame265
05-30-2008, 01:10 AM
I think everyone on the island had a way of effecting his visions. So if something didn't go exactly the way it was suppose to, that could easily mislead one of his visions.

toddintexas
05-30-2008, 01:16 AM
You are assuming that Desmond saw Claire get on Frank's helicopter. Desmond never said who else he saw getting on the helicopter besides Claire and Aaron. Perhaps, after the O6 get back, Claire and Aaron get on a helicopter at that point.

Before you blast TPTB for errors, sit back and wait to see how things play out.

I totally agree, I don't think TPTB will leave us in limbo about this situation, it will be addressed. I also don't think we have seen the last of Desmond. Afterall, Ben vowed to kill Penny, so Penny will still be in the show and so will Desmond. Ben will probably realize that Penny can help them get back to the Island.

We still have 2 seasons to go and look at all that's happened in the last 2 seasons. People got off the Island, the Island friggin moved, Desmond mind travelled, Richard is the ageless wonder, and The Others are now being led by Locke, that is until he left the Island and died as Jeremy Bentham. Lots can happen in 2 seasons and I'm sure Desmond's vision will be addressed. I know it's hard to wait, but it's what we need to do before we blast TPTB.

EmptyJar
05-30-2008, 01:23 AM
And uh


Why is it that you're so quick to jump the gun on this one and point it at desmond, what about the fact that claire is still on the island? What if they find it again, with say....

a helicopter?

She could certainly get on it then w/aaron, couldnt she? Two seasons left... dont write off one vision just yet....

shyguy
05-30-2008, 01:25 AM
If she gets on a helicopter at a later point, did Charlie really need to rush down and turn off the jammer for it to happen?

Charlie
05-30-2008, 01:35 AM
I don't think Charlie's death was meaningless at all. There was more cause and effect to be had from what he did than just Claire and Aaron getting off or not.

It was always my impression that Desmond these flashes and deduced from those flashes that Claire and Aaron were going to get on the helicopter. I really think he believed that. It's either that, or "Fate" has a flaw.

toddintexas
05-30-2008, 01:37 AM
If she gets on a helicopter at a later point, did Charlie really need to rush down and turn off the jammer for it to happen?

Well yeah, because he was going to die anyway. Desmond had saved his life 4 times already so at least this time he died and served a purpose, people got off the Island, including Aaron. If he didn't die then, he would have died at a later time and then he might have died for nothing. He was marked for death, and at least he died sacrificing his life to save others. We need to look at the big picture, and not just look at Desmond sending Charlie to his death. Desmond wasn't the one trying to bump Charlie off, it was fate. Desmond was the one saving him.

nofaith
05-30-2008, 01:39 AM
Well, Boone did tell us in "Further Instructions" that Desmond was 'helping himself'. Perhaps he DID lie to Charlie because the vision he saw was himself with Penny and not Arron and Claire's rescue...

Michelle Friday
05-30-2008, 01:44 AM
Desmond's happy ever after will be short lived, since Ben vowed to kill Widmore's
daughter (aka Penny).

toddintexas
05-30-2008, 01:55 AM
Well, Boone did tell us in "Further Instructions" that Desmond was 'helping himself'. Perhaps he DID lie to Charlie because the vision he saw was himself with Penny and not Arron and Claire's rescue...

Well, I believe that "Further Instructions" was before Desmond started saving Charlie's life. Saving Charlie's life I don't think could be classified as "helping himself".

ekoistheman
05-30-2008, 01:55 AM
As im sure i dont have to remind most of you here, Des got charlie to go to the looking glass cause he said he saw claire get on the chopper and leave the island. As they've now left the island does this mean des was wrong and charlie basically died for nothing? Unless they plan on having her get on a chopper at the very end of the series in which case thats some huge foreshadowing.

I hope my suggestion is the case im not usually so nitpicky but this kinda just sticks out as a rather big point.

avandelay
05-30-2008, 01:59 AM
As im sure i dont have to remind most of you here, Des got charlie to go to the looking glass cause he said he saw claire get on the chopper and leave the island. As they've now left the island does this mean des was wrong and charlie basically died for nothing? Unless they plan on having her get on a chopper at the very end of the series in which case thats some huge foreshadowing.

I hope my suggestion is the case im not usually so nitpicky but this kinda just sticks out as a rather big point.

Desmond lied to Charlie. Desmond had a vision of himself in a raft, being rescued by Penny's boat. He's a selfish bastard, and there is ample evidence in his background to show that.

divinesynder
05-30-2008, 02:02 AM
Well, Boone did tell us in "Further Instructions" that Desmond was 'helping himself'. Perhaps he DID lie to Charlie because the vision he saw was himself with Penny and not Arron and Claire's rescue...

OMG! I've been wondering about this since Desmond started having his flashes. I always though it was weird that Boone said this to Locke. I kept thinking there had to be some deeper meaning behind it.

RodimusBen
05-30-2008, 02:08 AM
lol. There's nothing to tell us for certain either way, but I think it's strange to call Desmond selfish. He put his life at risk multiple times for the plane crash survivors. Not to mention, he was about to go in Charlie's place down to the Looking Glass...

DeadCharlie
05-30-2008, 03:48 AM
We know they are all going to go back to the island. So, Desmond could have seen Clair and Arron getting on the helo at that time. And yes, it was still necessary for Charlie to go down there and die to make it happen. Everything that has happened was made possible by Charlies actions.

Everyone loves Charlie and wants to be mad at the writers for this but just think about it and it will be alright. There have been plenty of dead characters, just because one is your favorite doesn't mean you are exempt from having to suffer. Just be glad that Charlie set the process in motion that will get them all saved eventually.

QueenLizzie13
05-30-2008, 03:53 AM
I really hope Charlie's death wasn't pointless. But it's beginning to feel that way for me....

:(

grrrr....
*angry face*

fran6
05-30-2008, 05:55 AM
Charlie's death wasn't pointless, it ultimately led to the rescue of the oceanic 6.
So Claire didn' get on the helicopter, big deal! It just wasn't meant to be, let's remember that it was said Aaron was not meant to be raised by his biological mother.Desmond saw many deaths for Charlie and only one happened to be true. Plus, the story is far from over.

What interests me more, in relation to the title of the thread, is to recap who didn't get on the helicopter and stayed on the Island. Let's see:

- Frogurt, Steve/Scott and all the redshirts that were in the barracks are dead.
- I really hope for Jin's sake that he is dead because, now that the Island was moved, he really is in the middle of nowhere.
-Claire's fate remains unknown but we're pretty sure she's on the Island.
I'm guessing she is the misterious character that won't get star billing in the fifth season but will return in the sixth.
- Locke, who I guess is now the new leader of the Others since Richard Alpert finds him Special
- Cindy is with Zack & Emma with the Others.
- Rose & Bernard are on the beach
- So is Sawyer
- A few redshirts we don't know.

Wow, that's it for the survivors of 815!

But there are others who may want to get off the Island:
- Juliet
- Daniel & Charlotte.
- And Miles

Some of them (Locke, Miles, Alpert, Cindy, Rose) are apparentely happy to remain stuck on mistery island.
Juliette and Sawyer really wanted to go away.
Most Others like the Island but may be frustrated to not be able to contact the outside world anymore.
We now know that Ben wants to reunite the Oceanic 6 and dead Locke in order to go back (before Widmore, of course).
So, will the other islanders get away in another helicopter ? I don't think it's a very relevant question, there is so much more to this story.

BrothaJefe316
05-30-2008, 05:58 AM
Yyyyyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeeeeeeah... i've been wondering about this too the past couple weeks........

uhohlisa
05-30-2008, 06:04 AM
Again, LOTS of characters' deaths on this show have been pointless. And it irks me that, until now, some of you haven't noticed that Lost will contradict itself (meaning that it will make something that happened 6 episodes ago pointless because of the events of the current episode. Its happened before, where I have been left thinking "well then WTF was the point??") I'm sorry, but while Charlie was a likable, beloved character, he wasn't necessary to the greater mythology of the show. The same goes for Sawyer, IMO. (In before "OMG BUT SKATE HAS TO RAISE AARON ON THE ISLAND EVEN THOUGH THAT MAKES ZERO SENSE I SWEAR THEY DO!.")


edit: I'd also like to add that the more time goes by, the MORE I miss Boone & Shannon. So... Lost is hard. The end.

lostnthesoutheast
05-30-2008, 10:11 AM
Well, I miss Mr. Eko most of all and his death was about as pointless as it gets.

But it still bugs me that Desmond's visions and Charlie's death took up so much screen time last year, to just be totally forgotten about this year.

dstripling
05-30-2008, 10:31 AM
Maybe Claire and Aaron get on a helicopter to go back to the island.

Lost Ed
05-30-2008, 12:05 PM
What is this now? 9th? 10th? thread about Desmond's lie to Charlie? And it reads just like all the other threads. Desmond lovers won't allow for the obvious. One of the few obvious things we've ever seen on Lost.

Sometime in S5, you will see a scene between Penny and Desmond, this I've spoken before. I can't think of any other way for the lie to come out, so I give it to Desmond and Penny.

Penny will ask Desmond about Charlie, the guy she talked to during that short interval before the signal was lost. She'll probably put it as, "Your friend, Charlie." At this point, Desmond will confess the entirety of his lie.

Then the Desmond lovers can start another thread to discuss how he didn't really mean it when he told Penny he lied.

Isabel
05-30-2008, 12:16 PM
Desmond didn't seem surprised that Claire didn't get on the chopper. I guess he wasn't telling the truth. But what else did he see? The dark future of the island? Jin dying? The sad life of the O6? A little too much for just being with his girlfriend.

ManInBlack
05-30-2008, 12:28 PM
Amongst all the conjecture, no one has mentioned that Aaron DID get on the helicopter.

Maybe that's what Desmond saw, and assumed Claire would be with Aaron. Or maybe it was too complicated to explain to Charlie at the moment.

Or MAYBE it's just a television show. You know, entertainment, not religion:eek2:

It might make more sense to wait and see what happens in the next two seasons.

LostMyMarbles
05-30-2008, 01:04 PM
I still suspect that Claire and Aaron will be on a helicopter together sometime before the end of LOST, and that it will be important to the plot. That's another thing they do . . . wait YEARS for the payoff.

minnesotan_grl83
05-30-2008, 01:56 PM
"Don't you DARE bring him back! Don't you DARE!" -Claire to Kate in her dream on Aaron.

Didn't Kate say "Don't you DARE say we have to go back! Don't you DARE, Jack!" after Kate got out of her car and slapped Jack across the face at the airport?

Seems like Claire's been haunting Kate since that visit.


Poor Jack. Poor Kate.. Poor Aaron.. poor everyone.. actually..

xManofFaithx
05-30-2008, 02:03 PM
Yeah, that doesn't sit well with me either. I assume that we have probably now seen the last of Desmond (since he has his happy ending) so we may never know whether or not he lied to Charlie delibertly or not.

Haven't the writers said that they are going to revisit Desmond's prison time and reasons in a future flashback? I agree that he's had his happy ending, and much like Boone, his character has lost its purpose, but I don't think we've seen the end of Desmond.

Besides, I like him too much.

LostMyMarbles
05-30-2008, 02:39 PM
Haven't the writers said that they are going to revisit Desmond's prison time and reasons in a future flashback? I agree that he's had his happy ending, and much like Boone, his character has lost its purpose, but I don't think we've seen the end of Desmond.

Besides, I like him too much.

Desmond's storyline may be ending, but Penelope's is just beginning. Desmond has to help hide her from Ben.

reesie
05-31-2008, 02:13 AM
I was wondering the same thing, because, to me, the only possible redeeming part of the horror of Charlie dying was that Aaron and Claire would be getting onto a helicopter, as Des predicted. So, if that, in fact, did not happen, what does that say about Charlie's death and Des' "visions"? Are both meaningless, after all? What a waste.

kittenkong80
05-31-2008, 02:42 AM
I always felt Des lied to Charlie.

It doesn't make Charlie's sacrifice meaningless, however. His heart was true and the sacrifice real - his personal motivation to sacrifice himself for his friends and Claire and Aaron is what gives it meaning -- not the lie that got him there.

engulfthemanatee
05-31-2008, 02:55 AM
I think people underestimate the writers. Desmond's vision of Claire and Aaron getting onto the 'copter is too big of a MacGuffin to let lie. Remember that by the third season finale they knew their end date.

I'm going with a long setup.

eloramoon
05-31-2008, 03:01 AM
Desmond lied to Charlie. Desmond had a vision of himself in a raft, being rescued by Penny's boat. He's a selfish model student, and there is ample evidence in his background to show that.

Yeouch! I think Desmond is one of the last people on that island who deserves to be called selfish. Eek.


From what we've seen of Desmond's visions, they are cloudy blurs... flashes of motion that are pretty hard to interpret, especially if you don't know what you're looking at. It's very possible he only had the impression of a woman getting on the chopper with Aaron and assumed it was Claire. Or, maybe he just saw Aaron and assumed Claire was there, too. Either way, there would have been no reason for him to lie about it to Charlie. I think Charlie would have been just as willing to save just Aaron, even if they weren't sure where Claire was in the image.

Jynes
05-31-2008, 03:23 AM
Maybe Desmond's vision was changed by Christian Shepard who intervened and prevented claire from getting on the helicopter

Palmolive
05-31-2008, 06:08 AM
Desmond lied to Charlie. Desmond had a vision of himself in a raft, being rescued by Penny's boat. He's a selfish model student, and there is ample evidence in his background to show that.
Yeah, exactly. That's why he offered to go down to the Looking Glass instead of Charlie. That's why he went down when he woke up after Charlie knocked him out. Sure. How dare he be so selfish? :D

JSYGirl
05-31-2008, 06:56 AM
One problem...

We don't know what he saw. We've only ever seen him acting on what he saw...

a) He may have seen a group of people - including Aaron - on the helicopter, and assumed that it was Claire holding the baby when it was actually Kate.
b) He may have seen Claire & Aaron on the chopper, but events were changed by Christian - he can't control everything to make sure it happens the way he saw it.
c) The finale set up the cast for everyone who left to return to the Island. If that includes Locke's body, then it certainly includes Aaron (possibly Ji Yeon as well). What he saw may not have happened yet. Perhaps in S5 or S6, Claire and Aaron get into a helicopter together.

Outrajess
05-31-2008, 06:57 AM
Yeah, exactly. That's why he offered to go down to the Looking Glass instead of Charlie. That's why he went down when he woke up after Charlie knocked him out. Sure. How dare he be so selfish? :D

He dove down because Mikhail was shooting at him...

Are we all forgetting Desmond hightailing it out of the hatch the minute Jack and John showed up and were willing to push the button??

Palmolive
05-31-2008, 07:25 AM
He dove down because Mikhail was shooting at him...
Do you really think that he would have stayed on the kayak and waited for Charlie's death if Mikhail hadn't shown up?

Are we all forgetting Desmond hightailing it out of the hatch the minute Jack and John showed up and were willing to push the button??
He was down there for three years. I don't think anyone would have stayed if they were in Desmond's place.

I myself am not the biggest Desmond fan (in fact he was one of my least favorite characters in season three), but I don't think he deserves being called selfish or a coward, because the writers are simply trying to make us forget they ever mentioned the "prophecy" with Claire and Aaron. We've seen him with Aaron on the freighter several times and he never said anything, not because he doesn't care, but because Darlton suddenly decided to make Claire disappear into the jungle. There's always the possibility that the vision will come true some time in the future, but I very much dbout it.

ostrich1
06-03-2008, 04:31 PM
Remember when Desmond "saw" Claire and Aaron get on a helicopter in one of his flashes? Since Charlie sacrificed himself, and everything else Desmond has seen has come true, how is it possible at this point, for Claire to take Aaron on a helicopter? I'm confused (which is often!).

branders0n
06-03-2008, 04:38 PM
I'm reluctant to say it because Desmond is one of my favorite characters, but I think Desmond was flat out lying to Charlie. He sent Charlie to The Looking Glass for his own gain. Remember the episode when Locke couldn't talk and he had a dream of Boone pushing him in his wheelchair? Boone told Locke not to worry about Desmond because he was "taking care of himself." If I remember correctly, Desmond was talking with two women in that scene. I wonder if those two women are the same ones that were in The Looking Glass?

ostrich1
06-03-2008, 04:48 PM
Ohh, I love Desmond too, and I have a hard time believing that he was lying. I can't remember, but didn't we see a little clip of that happening in that episode? Sometimes we could see Desmond's flashes (as viewers) and sometimes we couldn't. We all know how deeply in love he is with Penny, but do you think he would really do that to Charlie to see her again?

branders0n
06-03-2008, 04:59 PM
Maybe he thought that somehow he could have Charlie contact the freighter and then save him. Until I see Claire and Aaron getting onto a helicopter, I will believe Desmond used Charlie.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:02 PM
Out of his 6 or so flahses we only saw 1. All the rest were true., I see no reason why this time and only this time would be a lie. The show is not over. Penny's helicopter could still take Claire and Aaron off the island as it is evident Aaron needs to go back to the island.

moonflower
06-03-2008, 05:03 PM
I'm leaning towards Desmond using Charlie at that point too. I think Desmond spent so much time trying to save Charlie, and then in the end he realized Charlie was really meant to die and there was nothing he could do about it. If he continued to save him, things would not "be right". Maybe it was just something he told Charlie to make it easier for Charlie to sacrifice himself?

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:06 PM
I'm leaning towards Desmond using Charlie at that point too. I think Desmond spent so much time trying to save Charlie, and then in the end he realized Charlie was really meant to die and there was nothing he could do about it. If he continued to save him, things would not "be right". Maybe it was just something he told Charlie to make it easier for Charlie to sacrifice himself?


If he was just using Charlie then why did he try to take his place. Only by being knocked out, did it stop him from taking Charlie's place. It makes no sense what your saying because he tried to take his place.

moonflower
06-03-2008, 05:11 PM
I thought perhaps he changed his mind in the last minute - at first he was planning of letting Charlie go through with it, but at the critical point he realized he couldn't and was trying to take his place.

branders0n
06-03-2008, 05:14 PM
If he was just using Charlie then why did he try to take his place. Only by being knocked out, did it stop him from taking Charlie's place. It makes no sense what your saying because he tried to take his place.

He tried to take his place because he knew the jammer had to be turned off so he could be with Penny. He didn't see himself dying, so he probably didn't feel he was in any danger.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:19 PM
He tried to take his place because he knew the jammer had to be turned off so he could be with Penny. He didn't see himself dying, so he probably didn't feel he was in any danger.


That makes no sense. If that's the case then why even tell Charlie what he had to do. If he had no worry about death and figured he could do it, then why didn't he just go do it and come back before anyone noticed.

Lost Ed
06-03-2008, 05:20 PM
Out of his 6 or so flahses we only saw 1. All the rest were true., I see no reason why this time and only this time would be a lie. The show is not over. Penny's helicopter could still take Claire and Aaron off the island as it is evident Aaron needs to go back to the island.


If this is true. It means you only watch the show every now and again, or get up for crackers at the wrong times...

AboutBunnies
06-03-2008, 05:22 PM
I thought perhaps he changed his mind in the last minute - at first he was planning of letting Charlie go through with it, but at the critical point he realized he couldn't and was trying to take his place.That's my feeling too. I think, as others have mentioned, that he did know Charlie was going to die anyway and so thought he might as well die in this way. But, because he is a good guy, he couldn't help but try to save Charlie one last time.

Lost Ed
06-03-2008, 05:26 PM
If he was just using Charlie then why did he try to take his place. Only by being knocked out, did it stop him from taking Charlie's place. It makes no sense what your saying because he tried to take his place.

Remember the arrow vision with Charlie getting hit in the throat? Remember Desmond pulled everybody from that vision together to be sure it happened as he saw it? remember at the last minute he (Desmond) couldn't go through with it and pushed Charlie out of the way?

Same here, at the last minute, he couldn't go through with it, but Charlie bonked him on the head. Desmond only went to the station after Patchy started shooting at him.
To say he wanted to do it instead of Charlie is to overlook his own past actions.

If there was any vision at all, other than Charlie and the yellow light...which we saw as a vision...then the remainder of this vision is Desmond seeing himself with Penny as a result of Charlie's actions....and whattayaknow...Desmond and Penny get together in the season finale. What an amazing coincidence...didn't see that coming. Yeah, right.

branders0n
06-03-2008, 05:26 PM
That makes no sense. If that's the case then why even tell Charlie what he had to do. If he had no worry about death and figured he could do it, then why didn't he just go do it and come back before anyone noticed.

Because he saw Charlie do it and thought that was the way it was supposed to be done. Once he and Charlie got there, he had second thoughts like the many other times he saved Charlie's life. Don't get me wrong, I'm hoping Desmond wasn't lying to Charlie. But based on Desmond's past actions of doing anything to be with Penny and the fact that he got off the island instead of Claire, I think Desmond was lying.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:26 PM
If this is true. It means you only watch the show every now and again, or get up for crackers at the wrong times...


Ok, other than his flash in catch-22 please explain to me what other flashes we saw.

When did we see:

1. Charlie being struck by lighting
2.Charlie drowning to save Claire
3. Charlie falling off a rock and drowning trying to get a bird for Claire
4. Anything about the looking glass.

So when exactly did we see anything other than what was in Catch-22? Please enlighten me?
100%
Because he saw Charlie do it and thought that was the way it was supposed to be done. Once he and Charlie got there, he had second thoughts like the many other times he saved Charlie's life. Don't get me wrong, I'm hoping Desmond wasn't lying to Charlie. But based on Desmond's past actions of doing anything to be with Penny and the fact that he got off the island instead of Claire, I think Desmond was lying.

Ok, what are all these past actions to be with Penny that he did. The only one I can think of is refusign to go back to the island in season 4 and the season 2 opener when he ran to his boat and left everyone else there. The first I agree with, the second was understanable.

I mean he turned a key knowing in his mind he would never see Penny again. He did it to save everyone else. He left Penny a second time because of what Ms.Harting(sp) said, he saved Charlie from an arrow when it ment Penny would be there if he let Charlie die. He helped Sayid, Michael and all those readshirts get to the frieghter.

So what are these instances you are taking about.
100%
Remember the arrow vision with Charlie getting hit in the throat? Remember Desmond pulled everybody from that vision together to be sure it happened as he saw it? remember at the last minute he (Desmond) couldn't go through with it and pushed Charlie out of the way?

Same here, at the last minute, he couldn't go through with it, but Charlie bonked him on the head. Desmond only went to the station after Patchy started shooting at him.
To say he wanted to do it instead of Charlie is to overlook his own past actions.

If there was any vision at all, other than Charlie and the yellow light...which we saw as a vision...then the remainder of this vision is Desmond seeing himself with Penny as a result of Charlie's actions....and whattayaknow...Desmond and Penny get together in the season finale. What an amazing coincidence...didn't see that coming. Yeah, right.


Ok, how does any of that corralate to him lying about ONLY this vision?

Charlie went through with this on his own. Desmond told him what happened and what would happen to him and Charlie choose to go. Desmond gave him an out. So again, where is the lying coming from.

Lost Ed
06-03-2008, 05:34 PM
Ok, other than his flash in catch-22 please explain to me what other flashes we saw.

When did we see:

1. Charlie being struck by lighting
2.Charlie drowning to save Claire
3. Charlie falling off a rock and drowning trying to get a bird for Claire
4. Anything about the looking glass.

So when exactly did we see anything other than what was in Catch-22? Please enlighten me?

I shall:

When Desmond was explaining to Charlie why some of his (Desmond's) actions seemed curious, for lack of better terminology, Desmond finally explains to Charlie why he (Desmond) had been acting the way he has. As the explanations occur, during that conversation, as Desmond tells the tale, we visually see what he is saying to Charlie.
We see the lightning, the drowning, the bird.

Episodes later, we see the first half of the Looking Glass incident, the Charlie part, but we never ever see in any visual or explanatory form of the second part of this alleged vision, which is Claire and Aaron getting on the chopper. It is never given as a visual, as were the above, after the fact as explained by Desmond, or before the fact, as when we see Desmond's arrow vision. This one vision, Claire and Aaron, stands alone, with absolutely no further explanation or context, visual or otherwise.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:40 PM
I shall:

When Desmond was explaining to Charlie why some of his (Desmond's) actions seemed curious, for lack of better terminology, Desmond finally explains to Charlie why he (Desmond) had been acting the way he has. As the explanations occur, during that conversation, as Desmond tells the tale, we visually see what he is saying to Charlie.
We see the lightning, the drowning, the bird.

Episodes later, we see the first half of the Looking Glass incident, the Charlie part, but we never ever see in any visual or explanatory form of the second part of this alleged vision, which is Claire and Aaron getting on the chopper. It is never given as a visual, as were the above, after the fact as explained by Desmond, or before the fact, as when we see Desmond's arrow vision. This one vision, Claire and Aaron, stands alone, with absolutely no further explanation or context, visual or otherwise.


Again, what episode did we actually see his visions and not just him telling us? Other than Catch-22. What episodes did this happen in?

Madge
06-03-2008, 05:43 PM
Maybe Des just saw the back of Frank's head and thought it was Claire? I don't care if Des lied or not, Charlie dying in the Looking Glass was a lot more noble than falling in the water trying to catch a bird. I can live with it.

Lost Ed
06-03-2008, 05:43 PM
Again, what episode did we actually see his visions and not just him telling us? Other than Catch-22. What episodes did this happen in?

For crying outloud...do your own homework. Find the episode where Desmond explains his visions to Charlie. Specifically, the ones you asked about.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:44 PM
For crying outloud...do your own homework. Find the episode where Desmond explains his visions to Charlie. Specifically, the ones you asked about.


Dude, I am asking you for proof because what you are saying never happened. EVER! That's why I want you to tell me where it was from. The only vision we saw was in Catch-22.

Lost Ed
06-03-2008, 05:46 PM
Dude, I am asking you for proof because what you are saying never happened. EVER! That's why I want you to tell me where it was from. The only vision we saw was in Catch-22.


As time permits...hopefully this thread will not disappear before then. I do have a tendancy to lose them...threads I mean. No, not clothes...threads...

branders0n
06-03-2008, 05:50 PM
Desmond joined the military to prove to Charles Widmore that he wasn't a coward. He entered an around the world boat race so he could be with Penny. Those two things alone are huge, life changing events. He is willing to put that much time and effort into proving his love for Penny. Why do you think he wouldn't do something as quick and easy as letting someone succumb to their fate? Charlie was going to die unless Desmond kept saving him. It got to a point where Charlie's death would benefit Desmond, so instead of continuing to delay the inevitable, Desmond just let it happen.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 05:55 PM
Desmond joined the military to prove to Charles Widmore that he wasn't a coward. He entered an around the world boat race so he could be with Penny. Those two things alone are huge, life changing events. He is willing to put that much time and effort into proving his love for Penny. Why do you think he wouldn't do something as quick and easy as letting someone succumb to their fate? Charlie was going to die unless Desmond kept saving him. It got to a point where Charlie's death would benefit Desmond, so instead of continuing to delay the inevitable, Desmond just let it happen.

Ok, stop. He did not let it happened. Charlie CHOOSE to die. By saying what you are, you are totally removing the heroic aspect of Charlie's death. He didn't just die, he choose to die in self sacrifice. Charlie's choose it, it didn't just happen to him.
100%
Also what about his flash from Locke's speech. We never saw that flash either.

Olu
06-03-2008, 06:01 PM
I'm reluctant to say it because Desmond is one of my favorite characters, but I think Desmond was flat out lying to Charlie. He sent Charlie to The Looking Glass for his own gain. Remember the episode when Locke couldn't talk and he had a dream of Boone pushing him in his wheelchair? Boone told Locke not to worry about Desmond because he was "taking care of himself." If I remember correctly, Desmond was talking with two women in that scene. I wonder if those two women are the same ones that were in The Looking Glass?

Alas, no. But that would have been great! :)

http://gallery.lost-media.com/displayimage-1185-178.html

branders0n
06-03-2008, 06:09 PM
Ok, stop. He did not let it happened. Charlie CHOOSE to die. By saying what you are, you are totally removing the heroic aspect of Charlie's death. He didn't just die, he choose to die in self sacrifice. Charlie's choose it, it didn't just happen to him.
100%
Also what about his flash from Locke's speech. We never saw that flash either.

I'm not trying to downplay Charlie's sacrifice at all. He absolutely chose to accept his fate. But to say that Desmond didn't let him do it is just wrong. Desmond could have let Charlie get struck by lightning, but he didn't. He could have let Charlie drown, but he didn't. He could have let Charlie get shot in the throat with an arrow, but he didn't. He changed his mind about letting Charlie go down to The Looking Glass, but got knocked out before he could stop him. Charlie chose to sacrifice himself, but was only able to because Desmond let him

hezekiah
06-03-2008, 06:10 PM
I'm reluctant to say it because Desmond is one of my favorite characters, but I think Desmond was flat out lying to Charlie. He sent Charlie to The Looking Glass for his own gain. Remember the episode when Locke couldn't talk and he had a dream of Boone pushing him in his wheelchair? Boone told Locke not to worry about Desmond because he was "taking care of himself." If I remember correctly, Desmond was talking with two women in that scene. I wonder if those two women are the same ones that were in The Looking Glass?


"I agree with you completely. Desmond's whole motivation for leaving the island was purely selfish on his part and nothing at all to do with Lostie rescue other than that it was coincidental to his reunification with Penny. Desmond knew that whoever went down into the Looking Glass to push the button was going to drown and he made very sure it wasn't him who did the drowning by sending Charlie instead as he wanted to be very much alive and breathing when Penny showed up. Telling Charlie that he had "seen" Claire and Aaron get on the rescue helicopter was the lie he told Charlie in order to motivate him into doing it."

havok579257
06-03-2008, 06:13 PM
I'm not trying to downplay Charlie's sacrifice at all. He absolutely chose to accept his fate. But to say that Desmond didn't let him do it is just wrong. Desmond could have let Charlie get struck by lightning, but he didn't. He could have let Charlie drown, but he didn't. He could have let Charlie get shot in the throat with an arrow, but he didn't. He changed his mind about letting Charlie go down to The Looking Glass, but got knocked out before he could stop him. Charlie chose to sacrifice himself, but was only able to because Desmond let him


How did he let him? He told him what was coming. How is that in anyway letting him do it? Letting him do it would be telling him he had to go down there but not tell him what was coming. All he did was give Charlie info about his vision which might I remind you Charlie knew that he hadf a vision and demanded to know about it. How is giving him info about what the vision was the same as making him do it?
100%
"I agree with you completely. Desmond's whole motivation for leaving the island was purely selfish on his part and nothing at all to do with Lostie rescue other than that it was coincidental to his reunification with Penny. Desmond knew that whoever went down into the Looking Glass to push the button was going to drown and he made very sure it wasn't him who did the drowning by sending Charlie instead as he wanted to be very much alive and breathing when Penny showed up. Telling Charlie that he had "seen" Claire and Aaron get on the rescue helicopter was the lie he told Charlie in order to motivate him into doing it."


Again, where are you getting this being a lie from. What indication at all do we have that he lied. Other than it has yet to happen, but last I checked, just because it hasn't happened yet, doesn't mean it won't.

Selfish??? So explain to me what turning the key was all about? How was that selfish?

Madge
06-03-2008, 06:23 PM
Considering we didn't see the vision, he may have just seen a woman holding a baby and assumed it was Claire. Puzzle pieces, not the whole picture on the box.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 06:24 PM
Considering we didn't see the vision, he may have just seen a woman holding a baby and assumed it was Claire. Puzzle pieces, not the whole picture on the box.


very true. or it could still happen.

Madge
06-03-2008, 06:27 PM
When Des had his Catch 22 vision he saw Charlie take an arrow, but he also saw Charlie standing by the parachute after they found Naomi. It's possible he saw possible outcomes and nothing definite. Des is good.

branders0n
06-03-2008, 06:28 PM
He let him because he put it in Charlie's head that sacrificing himself would save Claire and Aaron. It didn't. It saved Desmond and Aaron. Until Claire and Aaron fly away on a helicopter, this is all we know.

amslostfan
06-03-2008, 06:31 PM
Remember the episode when Locke couldn't talk and he had a dream of Boone pushing him in his wheelchair? Boone told Locke not to worry about Desmond because he was "taking care of himself." If I remember correctly, Desmond was talking with two women in that scene. I wonder if those two women are the same ones that were in The Looking Glass?
OOOOOO i love this idea ! I always wondered what Boone meant when he said that and was waiting for the moment 2 be revealed... you could be right. But i love Desmond :frown: lol.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 06:33 PM
He let him because he put it in Charlie's head that sacrificing himself would save Claire and Aaron. It didn't. It saved Desmond and Aaron. Until Claire and Aaron fly away on a helicopter, this is all we know.


What we know is that Desmond has yet to lie about one of his visions and he said he saw Claire and Aaron get on a copter. So it means it will happen, its only a matter of time.

Madge
06-03-2008, 06:33 PM
He let him because he put it in Charlie's head that sacrificing himself would save Claire and Aaron. It didn't. It saved Desmond and Aaron. Until Claire and Aaron fly away on a helicopter, this is all we know.

It save Des and Aaron - and Sun and Sayid and Hurley and Kate and Jack. It's not like Des kicked them all off the copter.

branders0n
06-03-2008, 06:42 PM
How did he let him? He told him what was coming. How is that in anyway letting him do it? Letting him do it would be telling him he had to go down there but not tell him what was coming. All he did was give Charlie info about his vision which might I remind you Charlie knew that he hadf a vision and demanded to know about it. How is giving him info about what the vision was the same as making him do it?
100%



Again, where are you getting this being a lie from. What indication at all do we have that he lied. Other than it has yet to happen, but last I checked, just because it hasn't happened yet, doesn't mean it won't.

Selfish??? So explain to me what turning the key was all about? How was that selfish?

It save Des and Aaron - and Sun and Sayid and Hurley and Kate and Jack. It's not like Des kicked them all off the copter.

Obviously. All I'm saying is other than a few instances of chivalry, Desmond is pretty much all about looking out for number 1. Boone flat out tells Locke in his vision that Desmond is "taking care of himself." I would love to see Claire and Aaron get on a helicopter at the end of the series and fly away. Unfortunately, there is no evidence, other than Desmond's words to Charlie, that this will happen. Desmond got on a helicopter and flew away. That is what he saw in his vision. That is why he talked Charlie into going down to The Looking Glass.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 06:50 PM
Obviously. All I'm saying is other than a few instances of chivalry, Desmond is pretty much all about looking out for number 1. Boone flat out tells Locke in his vision that Desmond is "taking care of himself." I would love to see Claire and Aaron get on a helicopter at the end of the series and fly away. Unfortunately, there is no evidence, other than Desmond's words to Charlie, that this will happen. Desmond got on a helicopter and flew away. That is what he saw in his vision. That is why he talked Charlie into going down to The Looking Glass.


You know stuff about Lost that none of us know about? Are these spoilers? If so, you should not be posting them here, its against the rules? Cause what you are stating as fact never happened. So are you implying this is going to happen and you know about it?

If not, then how on earth can you know what Desmond saw in his vision when none of us know. Or how he was lying about it when he NEVER lied about a vision before.

Please explain to me how any of this is just not you guessing and not using and logic we have seen to supoort your theory?

solarman
06-03-2008, 06:54 PM
Maybe when they go back to the island, claire and aaron get on the helicopter and leave together

Captain_Falafel
06-03-2008, 06:55 PM
What we know is that Desmond has yet to lie about one of his visions and he said he saw Claire and Aaron get on a copter. So it means it will happen, its only a matter of time.

Desmond lied to Charlie repeatedly about his Catch-22 vision.

Personally I didn't feel like Charlie had a choice. Desmond told him he would die no matter what he did. After his Looking Glass vision he said "This time you have to die" otherwise there wouldn't be any rescue. Yes, at the last minute Desmond gave Charlie a way out, but only after Charlie gone through a process of preparing himself for death and conditioning him to believe it had to happen to save his loved ones. Emotionally that is like pushing someone off a cliff and then saying they don't have to hit the bottom.

I don't want to downplay Charlie's heroism either, but I think people downplay the pressure/emotional blackmail that was placed on Charlie. His "fate" was very cruel. I know many other characters recieved cruel deaths, but Charlie was led to believe his death would achieve a greater good and that was the only reason he submitted to it. It feels like he was brainwashed.

Madge
06-03-2008, 07:04 PM
I hate that I'm starting to wish Des had just let Charlie drown saving Claire. Strike that, we got to see Des (bronzed and beautiful) carry her up the beach. Okay, I'll hate that I wish he had let Charlie drown catching a bird.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 07:06 PM
Desmond lied to Charlie repeatedly about his Catch-22 vision.

Personally I didn't feel like Charlie had a choice. Desmond told him he would die no matter what he did. After his Looking Glass vision he said "This time you have to die" otherwise there wouldn't be any rescue. Yes, at the last minute Desmond gave Charlie a way out, but only after Charlie gone through a process of preparing himself for death and conditioning him to believe it had to happen to save his loved ones. Emotionally that is like pushing someone off a cliff and then saying they don't have to hit the bottom.

I don't want to downplay Charlie's heroism either, but I think people downplay the pressure/emotional blackmail that was placed on Charlie. His "fate" was very cruel. I know many other characters recieved cruel deaths, but Charlie was led to believe his death would achieve a greater good and that was the only reason he submitted to it. It feels like he was brainwashed.


He never told Charlie his vision was a lie. He lied to Charlie, not about his vision. Everything we were shown in his vision came true. So he never lied about the vision, he just lied to Charlie.

So now its Desmond's fault that the universe was trying to kill Charlie? Yeah, that makes sense. Well then I guess its Roses fault Charlie dies because she was with him on the plane? Desmond told Charlie that no matter what he did, he was going to die. What the hell is the guy supposed to do? Charlie was hounding him none stop about what was going on and Desmond told him. Yet some how by telling him what is in store for him, Desmond is now selfish.

Desmond never said if you don't die, then there is no chance of rescue. Once again, your putting words in his mouth. He never stated this was their only chance of rescue. He told Charlie about his vision because.... HE ASKED DESMOND ABOUT IT!!! What should Desmond have done? Please tell me what would have been unselfish here when Charlie WANTS, repeat WANTS to know about the vision.


Again Desmond NEVER said Charlie had to do it or they would be stuck for life. He told him the vision and Charlie choose to follow it through. Your twisting everything here just to fit it into your arguement. Your putting words in Desmond's mouth and making up actions he never did.

Madge
06-03-2008, 07:15 PM
I do remember Des saying "you have to die this time" or something to that effect. But again, he only got small pictures of what was happening, I'm sure he thought it did mean rescue for everyone if Charlie turned off the jammer.

LooseEnds
06-03-2008, 07:19 PM
I shall:

When Desmond was explaining to Charlie why some of his (Desmond's) actions seemed curious, for lack of better terminology, Desmond finally explains to Charlie why he (Desmond) had been acting the way he has. As the explanations occur, during that conversation, as Desmond tells the tale, we visually see what he is saying to Charlie.
We see the lightning, the drowning, the bird.

Episodes later, we see the first half of the Looking Glass incident, the Charlie part, but we never ever see in any visual or explanatory form of the second part of this alleged vision, which is Claire and Aaron getting on the chopper. It is never given as a visual, as were the above, after the fact as explained by Desmond, or before the fact, as when we see Desmond's arrow vision. This one vision, Claire and Aaron, stands alone, with absolutely no further explanation or context, visual or otherwise.

I think you're missing havok's point, which is that the only time we saw Desmond's visions before they happened was in the Catch-22 (S3E17) episode. When Desmond explains to Charlie what's been going on (in S3E08, FBYE), he is citing the incidents that have already happened (lightning, Claire almost drowning), and we see glimpses of those scenes because they already happened on the show. Desmond doesn't mention the bird, and we don't see the bird (that incident doesn't take place until Par Avion, S3E12). In Par Avion, Desmond mentions his vision beforehand, but we don't actually see a vision of it.

And in TTLG, we still didn't see any of Desmond's visions before they actually happened. We only saw events within the Looking Glass station as they happened.

So havok is right - we only saw one of Desmond's visions before it occurred on the show.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 07:20 PM
not to mention he tried to save charlie when he locked himself in the room even though according to him that it would change his vision, he still tried. Although he couldn't break the glass.

Madge
06-03-2008, 07:20 PM
Yeah, the only visions they showed were the ones connected with finding Naomi.

Captain_Falafel
06-03-2008, 07:26 PM
Desmond never said if you don't die, then there is no chance of rescue. Once again, your putting words in his mouth. He never stated this was their only chance of rescue.

DESMOND: If you don't, none of it will happen. There won't be any rescue. I'm sorry, brother, but this time--this time you have to die.

You are putting words in my mouth because I never said Desmond is selfish in my post. Nor did I say it was Desmonds fault the universe wanted to kill Charlie. I wasn't even talking about Desmond. I was saying that Charlie only went to his death willingly because of what Desmond's visions were leading him to believe. So there's no need to fly off the handle at me.

I'm not twisting anything. I know this story very well. Desmond/Charlie were my favourite characters in S3.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 07:33 PM
DESMOND: If you don't, none of it will happen. There won't be any rescue. I'm sorry, brother, but this time--this time you have to die.

You are putting words in my mouth because I never said Desmond is selfish in my post. Nor did I say it was Desmonds fault the universe wanted to kill Charlie. I wasn't even talking about Desmond. I was saying that Charlie only went to his death willingly because of what Desmond's visions were leading him to believe. So there's no need to fly off the handle at me.

I'm not twisting anything. I know this story very well. Desmond/Charlie were my favourite characters in S3.


I'm not flying off the handle but you act like harlie had no choice. He choose to die. He did himself. Yet somehow this is causing everyone to say Desmond is selfish. I don;t get where the selfishness is coming from.

halfrek
06-03-2008, 07:37 PM
You know stuff about Lost that none of us know about? Are these spoilers? If so, you should not be posting them here, its against the rules? Cause what you are stating as fact never happened. So are you implying this is going to happen and you know about it?

If not, then how on earth can you know what Desmond saw in his vision when none of us know. Or how he was lying about it when he NEVER lied about a vision before.

Please explain to me how any of this is just not you guessing and not using and logic we have seen to supoort your theory?

there is no need to be so rude. to the point is one thing but rude is just not acceptable.

as for your questions, none of that is a spoiler. so please put away the rudeness and stop demanding everyone bow to your logic or whatever you want to call it. you can debate and discuss without belittling everyone with whom you disagree or find errors in their comments.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 07:42 PM
there is no need to be so rude. to the point is one thing but rude is just not acceptable.

as for your questions, none of that is a spoiler. so please put away the rudeness and stop demanding everyone bow to your logic or whatever you want to call it. you can debate and discuss without belittling everyone with whom you disagree or find errors in their comments.

Well my bad. He was stating it as fact. He was stating it like it was definate. I took it the wrong way obviously. So my bad.

Captain_Falafel
06-03-2008, 07:46 PM
Thanks Halfrek.

I think Charlie was prepared to die for his loved ones, but to say Charlie chose to die suggests he had free will and I don't think free will exists in Lost verse, not for any character. That is the impression the show has given me. One of the last things Charlie said was "So much for fate". He clearly didn't want fate to kill him. Fate just won like it always does on Lost.

havok579257
06-03-2008, 07:50 PM
Thanks Halfrek.

I think Charlie was prepared to die for his loved ones, but to say Charlie chose to die suggests he had free will and I don't think free will exists in Lost verse, not for any character. That is the impression the show has given me. One of the last things Charlie said was "So much for fate". He clearly didn't want fate to kill him. Fate just won like it always does on Lost.


desmond proved there is free will by saving Charlie numerous times.

There seems to be a balance or free--will and destiny.

Madge
06-03-2008, 07:50 PM
I think it could be argued that Charlie chose that particular scenario to die. He could have let Des prevent his death again by going down but he knew it was only a delay tactic and he would still be in danger. I think people (okay me) get frustrated that people accuse Des of just setting Charlie up when Charlie was going to die one way or the other. Des didn't want him to die, this vision just made him think it should happen to save everyone.

quizzical
06-03-2008, 07:50 PM
At this point, I think Desmond was talking about the future. IIRC, Desmond told Charlie he didn't know WHEN his vision would happen, just that it would come true as a result of Charlie's sacrifice. It seems like Jack is going to try and convince Kate to go back to the island, and she needs to bring Aaron with her. Claire may still be alive. Desmond could have easily seen Claire carry an older Aaron onto the helicopter.

http://www.thefuselage.com/Threaded/showpost.php?p=1789063&postcount=55

Looking back at the conversation, I take Charlie's "when" to mean when would Charlie need to flip the switch and die, not when would the rescue could occur. Desmond said he didn't know. But that could also be taken as evidence that Desmond doesn't know before hand when ANY of his visions will occur. Just that he goes along until he recognizes the events that happen in his vision, or until he acts to make the circumstances of the vision occur (such as the hike out to greet Naomi).

Captain_Falafel
06-03-2008, 08:01 PM
I think it could be argued that Charlie chose that particular scenario to die. He could have let Des prevent his death again by going down but he knew it was only a delay tactic and he would still be in danger. I think people (okay me) get frustrated that people accuse Des of just setting Charlie up when Charlie was going to die one way or the other. Des didn't want him to die, this vision just made him think it should happen to save everyone.

The big problem is that in S4 Desmond hasn't mentioned Charlie even once. This is the writers failing more so than the chararacters. Desmonds entire S3 story was about his flashes of Charlies death. It was a major story and the writers have just dropped it. In my opinion it's completely out of character for Desmond to instantly forget Charlie and his flashes and move on like it's all done and dusted, even though the Claire/Aaron part of his vision never came true. All the writers needed to do was have Desmond reflect on his visions/Charlies death. Damon actually said they were gonna do this. But they didn't. So now there is confusion and plotholes.

shoegirl
06-03-2008, 10:23 PM
The big problem is that in S4 Desmond hasn't mentioned Charlie even once. This is the writers failing more so than the chararacters. Desmonds entire S3 story was about his flashes of Charlies death. It was a major story and the writers have just dropped it. In my opinion it's completely out of character for Desmond to instantly forget Charlie and his flashes and move on like it's all done and dusted, even though the Claire/Aaron part of his vision never came true. All the writers needed to do was have Desmond reflect on his visions/Charlies death. Damon actually said they were gonna do this. But they didn't. So now there is confusion and plotholes.

I agree that Desmond should have mentioned Charlie, but frankly, Desmond, except in the constant was hardly used in S4. Too much Ben. :rolleyes:

I hope though, I really do, that Desmond's flash florward was correct, and that in some point in the future, we will absolutely see Claire get off the island with Aaron, and they'll be leaving the island (not a freighter) in the helicopter. :)

kittenkong80
06-04-2008, 12:10 AM
Poor Desmond. Poor Charlie.

I believe both to be heroic souls - but it only really shows through when the chips are down.

I believe that Desmond lied to Charlie about Claire and Aaron specifically getting on a helicopter to motivate Charlie to make his sacrifice. I think Des was at his desperate wits' end by this point. He keeps saving Charlie only to be handed another vision of Charlie's death. He warned Charlie about the birds, and poor Charlie came off as looking like a total jerk to Claire - because face it - that did not look like a heroic end, and Charlie had no motivation to succumb to it.

Then Des gets another vision. Charlie drowns. Only this time, his vision shows him a helicopter as well. IF his visions are true, then he likely saw the vision of himself, Kate, Aaron, Jack, Hurley, Sun and Sayid on the chopper. So he half lies to Charlie by throwing Claire on the chopper as well. Because this is it - this is rescue on the line. This is him reuniting with Penny.

But Des is conflicted about this - he doesn't want to be responsible for letting Charlie die, and yet he's had a taste of what's to come if he does. So Des is noble. He doesn't yank Charlie aside and say, "Hey, I've had a vision of rescue, but you have to die for it to come true." He keeps his mouth shut... until...


[Charlie notices Desmond has paused]
CHARLIE: What?
DESMOND: Nothing.
CHARLIE: Wait. You had one of your flashes again, didn't you?
DESMOND: No, Charlie, I didn't.

Charlie asks the magic question.

But Desmond doesn't fold until later in the episode. He approaches Charlie at Claire's tent:
DESMOND: Er, sorry. Er, Charlie. Can you give me a hand with something?
CHARLIE: Yeah, Desmond. Course.
[They start walking together]
CHARLIE: So, you ready to tell me what you saw this morning?
DESMOND: Aye.
CHARLIE: Right. So how's it happen this time?
[Pause]
CHARLIE: Come on, Des. You can tell me. I can take it.
[Pause]
DESMOND: What I saw, Charlie, was Claire and her baby getting into a helicopter. A helicopter that lifts off--leaves this Island.
CHARLIE: Are you sure?
DESMOND: Aye.
CHARLIE: A rescue helicopter on this beach?
[Desmond nods]
CHARLIE: This Island--that's what you saw?
[Desmond nods again]
CHARLIE: We're getting bloody rescued! I thought you were gonna tell me I was gonna die again!
DESMOND: You are, Charlie.
CHARLIE: Wait, what?
DESMOND: If you don't, none of it will happen. There won't be any rescue. I'm sorry, brother, but this time--this time you have to die.


Not only did the helicopter NOT pick up Aaron on the beach - it picked him up on the freighter. Charlie did not ask about it this time - this time Desmond approaches Charlie to give him this revelation.

I think the taste of rescue was too sweet - the temptation too great - the ultimate prize too dear for Desmond to risk Charlie not dying this time around. To make sure that this rescue would happen - he tells Charlie that he sees Claire and Aaron board a helicopter and get rescued. He doesn't force Charlie to make this sacrifice - but he is likely convinced he'll be willing for those two people above all others.

Even as Charlie has steeled himself for the task - Desmond gives him further confirmation:

CHARLIE: You sure you saw Claire and Aaron get on that helicopter?
DESMOND: Aye.


Desmond is a hero - but a flawed one, like most are. He is a present figure each time Charlie dies in his visions - otherwise he couldn't witness it and know it. He may have witnessed that only a musician could stop that signal and felt that he couldn't succeed with only that information.

I think we'll see a guilt-wrought Desmond in the future. He may even get a visit from Charlie - who knows. I have no doubt he believed that his vision meant that everyone would be rescued - but he did not witness Claire getting rescued.

The only other insights we've had to Desmond's visions had pretty immediate results. I don't think this result is a sleeper that is waiting to happen years into the future.

Fierro
06-04-2008, 12:49 AM
Jacob changed things....

UnsungHero108
06-04-2008, 12:58 AM
I'm reluctant to say it because Desmond is one of my favorite characters, but I think Desmond was flat out lying to Charlie. He sent Charlie to The Looking Glass for his own gain. Remember the episode when Locke couldn't talk and he had a dream of Boone pushing him in his wheelchair? Boone told Locke not to worry about Desmond because he was "taking care of himself." If I remember correctly, Desmond was talking with two women in that scene. I wonder if those two women are the same ones that were in The Looking Glass?

Heracy! He said there would be a flashing yellow light, and there was!

BTW: He was actually in the company of several women.

branders0n
06-04-2008, 01:18 PM
You know stuff about Lost that none of us know about? Are these spoilers? If so, you should not be posting them here, its against the rules? Cause what you are stating as fact never happened. So are you implying this is going to happen and you know about it?

If not, then how on earth can you know what Desmond saw in his vision when none of us know. Or how he was lying about it when he NEVER lied about a vision before.

Please explain to me how any of this is just not you guessing and not using and logic we have seen to supoort your theory?

I'm only basing this theory on what we've seen on the show. You are the one who is ASSUMING his vision is what he said it was. I am just looking at what has ACTUALLY HAPPENED. There is absolutely nothing that has been shown to support your arguement other than Desmond's description of his vision. I'm not saying Claire and Aaron definitley will not get onto a helicopter in the future. It's my THEORY that Desmond saw that saving Charlie time and again was going to be pointless and he used this vision of Charlie's death to get off the island and put and end to Charlie's suffering.

tommytoothpaste
06-04-2008, 02:37 PM
kittenkong has written a very good post and has given a very good side to the arguement im not saying that itds right but it seems plausible. try to imagine urself in the situation and u could see the one person u love again after how long.

u may be tempted i know i would be.

Kristene
06-04-2008, 02:51 PM
The show is not over. Penny's helicopter could still take Claire and Aaron off the island as it is evident Aaron needs to go back to the island.

I think you're right. Ben said they ALL have to go back to the island, i think Desmond's premonition will still be fulfilled when Aaron is back on the island again and there will be another chance for him and Claire to leave together. On a helicopter.

Lost Ed
06-04-2008, 02:54 PM
What we know is that Desmond has yet to lie about one of his visions and he said he saw Claire and Aaron get on a copter. So it means it will happen, its only a matter of time.

When?? When Aaron's 15 years old??? Taller ghost Aaron? We already know Desmond can't see BABY AARON/. The dude's at least three years old and he's yet to get off the island with Claire. Geez..

Unlike any other vision...Desmond was SUPER SPECIFIC as to what he told Charlie.

DO you think Charlie would have chosen to drown if Desmond had not said...SPECIFICALLY that he saw Claire and Aaron get on the chopper?

You need to goback and look at every description of every vision that is known... and watch the progression. First its either/or, either Charlie dies, or Desmond intervenes. Then they progress to If/Then. If Charlie dies, Penny arrives. If Charlie doesn't die, then Penny doesn't arrive.

So the final one...Let Charlie die, via the Looking Glass, and Penny and Desmond will be united...THAT'S WHAT HE SAW. We haven't seen it, but I'm 98% sure we will. Desmond saw himself with Penny in that vision whcih he claims saves Claire.

He lied.

Still working on that other thing.....cause I think its a case of mis-communication but I don't have time now. I don't have time for THIS now, I just chose to take a break, as it were.

Madge
06-04-2008, 03:04 PM
Okay, he lied. After the phone call with Penny, I'm happy with it.

heppamies
06-04-2008, 03:09 PM
Answer:

Desmond saw a woman carrying Aaron get on the chopper.

He thought it was Claire, but actually it was Kate.

Pythagoras99
06-04-2008, 03:11 PM
That makes no sense. If that's the case then why even tell Charlie what he had to do. If he had no worry about death and figured he could do it, then why didn't he just go do it and come back before anyone noticed.
Since when did Desmond believe that he would die without seeing a vision of it??? He believed that the switch had to be flipped to save everyone, and that who ever went down there would most likely drown, because the station was flooded. He tried to take Charlie's place because he is compassionate, and he couldn't bear seeing what Charlie was going through, so he tried to convince himself that there was a different reason for the visions -- namely that they were telling him to take his place.

And ultimately, Charlie didn't die because of what Desmond told him. He died because he was the only one of them who would be able to tap out "Good Vibrations" on the key pad. So he did that, while Des got the SCUBA gear. Neither of them still thought the vision was true at that point, about Charlie dying. They both thought it had been wrong.

I think turning off the jammer was a crucial thing. The O6 had to leave the island, and they had to come back. And sometime after they do, in season 6, I think Claire is going to get on a helicopter with Aaron.

branders0n
06-04-2008, 03:11 PM
kittenkong has written a very good post and has given a very good side to the arguement im not saying that itds right but it seems plausible. try to imagine urself in the situation and u could see the one person u love again after how long.

u may be tempted i know i would be.
I agree. I think kittenkong explained it perfectly.

Pythagoras99
06-04-2008, 03:35 PM
Unlike any other vision...Desmond was SUPER SPECIFIC as to what he told Charlie.

You need to goback and look at every description of every vision that is known... and watch the progression. First its either/or, either Charlie dies, or Desmond intervenes. Then they progress to If/Then. If Charlie dies, Penny arrives. If Charlie doesn't die, then Penny doesn't arrive.

So the final one...Let Charlie die, via the Looking Glass, and Penny and Desmond will be united...THAT'S WHAT HE SAW. We haven't seen it, but I'm 98% sure we will. Desmond saw himself with Penny in that vision whcih he claims saves Claire.

He lied.
I think you're confusing his visions with his attempts to interpret his visions. His visions are always "super-specific". He sees what he sees. We got to see one of them, and it was more specific than what he said about the switch and the helicopter. How he interpreted them, however, changed all the time. At first he saw stuff, and then made it not happen, to save Charlie. Even then he said, "no matter what I do, you're gonna die." Then he started speculating that he had to make sure that everything in the vision happened in order for all the other parts to happen, and finally he started speculating that all the visions were a sign that he was meant to die in Charlie's place. I think there is a 0% chance that he lied about seeing Claire and Aaron get on the helicopter (between trying to sacrifice his life to save the world, and trying to sacrifice his life to save Charlie). He did lie at first about having the vision at all. But if all he wanted was for the vision to come true, he didn't have to tell Charlie anything. But he ultimately decided that Charlie deserved to know.

Also, in what actually happened so far, Aaron didn't leave the island in a helicopter, he left in a boat, so he didn't mistake Kate for Claire. It's possible that something happened to change it, but my bet is that it's still going to happen the way he saw it.

Captain_Falafel
06-04-2008, 03:36 PM
I think turning off the jammer was a crucial thing. The O6 had to leave the island, and they had to come back. And sometime after they do, in season 6, I think Claire is going to get on a helicopter with Aaron.

Question - Doesn't the idea of Kate just handing Aaron back to Claire bother anyone? The poor kid thinks Kate is his mother. His parent/child bond with Claire is now destroyed. Charlie didn't just want to save Claire/Aaron. He wanted to protect them. I don't think Charlie would have given his life knowing Claire/Aarons would be seperated for three years. It cheapens the value of Charlie's sacrifice to say "Oh they'll get their helicopter rescue eventually..." Claire has missed Aarons first steps, his first words. It is a tragedy. I hate to think that Darlton won't even acknowledge this. They'll just put them on a chopper in S6 and say "See! Desmonds vision was right!" It's balls. Too little, much too late.

Madge
06-04-2008, 03:53 PM
Well, Claire did walk away from Aaron and leave him in the jungle. She must have done so for a reason.

Pythagoras99
06-04-2008, 03:56 PM
Then Des gets another vision. Charlie drowns. Only this time, his vision shows him a helicopter as well. IF his visions are true, then he likely saw the vision of himself, Kate, Aaron, Jack, Hurley, Sun and Sayid on the chopper. So he half lies to Charlie by throwing Claire on the chopper as well. Because this is it - this is rescue on the line. This is him reuniting with Penny.

But Des is conflicted about this - he doesn't want to be responsible for letting Charlie die, and yet he's had a taste of what's to come if he does.

This doesn't work because he had been down that road before. He believed that Charlie's death was inevitable, and he believed that it had to happen the way he saw, and then Penny would come falling out of the sky. That would be a far greater temptation than the prospect of getting rescued. Yet when it came down to it, he realized it would be wrong, and he saved Charlie again. Because he is a good man.

It would not be believable or keeping with his character for him to have unlearned that lesson. His first instinct when he saw Charlie drown was to deny the vision completely. But he realized that he was still responsible for Charlie's death if he didn't warn him. So he told him what he saw, and why he believed it was necessary for him to flip the switch even though it meant he would die. His actions from the point of telling Charlie the vision on, are the actions of a noble and honest man, in keeping with his subsequent desire to take Charlie's place.

The only other insights we've had to Desmond's visions had pretty immediate results. I don't think this result is a sleeper that is waiting to happen years into the future.
Actually, the only vision we saw, of the parachutist, included him with Penny, which didn't happen until a long time later.
100%
Question - Doesn't the idea of Kate just handing Aaron back to Claire bother anyone? The poor kid thinks Kate is his mother. His parent/child bond with Claire is now destroyed.
Well, sure that could be bad, depending on how it's done, if it's done. I assume that whatever they do, they'll consider that.

Charlie didn't just want to save Claire/Aaron. He wanted to protect them. I don't think Charlie would have given his life knowing Claire/Aarons would be seperated for three years. It cheapens the value of Charlie's sacrifice to say "Oh they'll get their helicopter rescue eventually..." Claire has missed Aarons first steps, his first words. It is a tragedy. I hate to think that Darlton won't even acknowledge this. They'll just put them on a chopper in S6 and say "See! Desmonds vision was right!" It's balls. Too little, much too late.

That's the thing about visions. They don't come with paperwork that spells out all the details. They don't always mean what you assume. Desmond wrongly assumed that the parachutist was actually Penny, when the vision really only apparently implied that her arrival would ultimately lead to him being with Penny.

I don't know what Charlie would have done if he knew the full details of the future, but I think he'd still do what he had to do. Like Christian said, Aaron didn't belong there -- "some very bad things" are about to happen on the island.
100%
I shall:

When Desmond was explaining to Charlie why some of his (Desmond's) actions seemed curious, for lack of better terminology, Desmond finally explains to Charlie why he (Desmond) had been acting the way he has. As the explanations occur, during that conversation, as Desmond tells the tale, we visually see what he is saying to Charlie.
We see the lightning, the drowning, the bird.

Episodes later, we see the first half of the Looking Glass incident, the Charlie part, but we never ever see in any visual or explanatory form of the second part of this alleged vision, which is Claire and Aaron getting on the chopper. It is never given as a visual, as were the above, after the fact as explained by Desmond, or before the fact, as when we see Desmond's arrow vision. This one vision, Claire and Aaron, stands alone, with absolutely no further explanation or context, visual or otherwise.

Is there a website where you can order Col Locke's Hallucinogenic Jungle Paste for watching the episodes, or do you just make your own? ;););) J/K, all in good fun! :biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:

What you're misremembering is in Flashes Before Your Eyes. While Charlie is questioning Desmond we see a brief flashback of what actually happened, as Charlie is asking him how he knew. We see a brief flash of the lightning hit Desmond's lightning rod, and we very briefly see Claire thanking Desmond after he saved her.

I don't know what you're thinking of when you say we saw the first part of Desmond's Looking Glass vision. Like the other poster said, the only vision we saw any part of the vision from Catch-22.

quizzical
06-04-2008, 05:02 PM
Desmond is a hero - but a flawed one, like most are. He is a present figure each time Charlie dies in his visions - otherwise he couldn't witness it and know it. He may have witnessed that only a musician could stop that signal and felt that he couldn't succeed with only that information.

I think we'll see a guilt-wrought Desmond in the future. He may even get a visit from Charlie - who knows. I have no doubt he believed that his vision meant that everyone would be rescued - but he did not witness Claire getting rescued.

The only other insights we've had to Desmond's visions had pretty immediate results. I don't think this result is a sleeper that is waiting to happen years into the future.

While my HOPE is that Desmond was telling the truth to Charlie about his vision, I think at this point, it could go either way. You are correct when you point out that he is a flawed hero. The question is, where are we in his character arch?

Up to this point, the entire arch of Desmond's character has been his quest to be worthy of Penny's love. That's why he went on the boat race - to disprove the military's conclusion that Desmond was a coward. To prove to Penny (even if she didn't believe he was a coward in the first place), and Charles Widmore that he was capable of heroic acts. To prove to himself that he was a good man. The vision of Claire and Aaron gives us two ways to continue telling Desmond's story.

If Desmond lied to Charlie about the vision of Claire and Aaron for the sole purpose of getting Charlie to sacrifice his life so Des himself could be rescued, then obviously Des has not yet been redeemed. Such a self-serving act does not make Des worthy of Penny's love. The guilt will eat away at him, and we'll spend the next two seasons watching Des attempt to make up for the lie. He will pay a price - possibly even Micheal's price - and in the end (live or die) will be a redeemed hero.

If Desmond told the truth to Charlie, and believed that Charlie's sacrifice really would lead to Claire and Aaron's rescue, then Desmond has already been redeemed. That was one of the implications of turning the fail-safe key - that his act of self-sacrifice finally established that Des was a good man. All he needed to do was get back to Penny and live happily ever after. If Des is already redeemed, his story would take a new turn in the next two seasons. The story wouldn't be whether Desmond is a hero, but instead HOW MUCH of a hero. Now that he has all he has ever wanted in life, will he risk it to help Jack get back to the island and presumably rescue those left behind? The question becomes, how much sacrifice (considering he already spent three years trying to get back to Penny) is enough to be rewarded with happiness? Can Des truly be worth of Penny if he is, in effect, trading all those lives to be with her? I think this is a really interesting question, and not one often asked on television.

I'd also like to point out that Desmond tried once before to exchange Charlie's life for a chance to see Penny. Desmond couldn't go through with it. Though tempted with the reward of Penny, Desmond made the hero's choice to save his friend's life. Whether this piece of Desmond's character would change from one episode to the next depends on whether Desmond was still in the "flawed" part of his character arch.

The bottom line is that it will depend on which story TPTB find more interesting to tell.

Captain_Falafel
06-04-2008, 08:13 PM
If Desmond told the truth to Charlie, and believed that Charlie's sacrifice really would lead to Claire and Aaron's rescue, then Desmond has already been redeemed.

I don't see Desmonds role in this Charlie/Claire story as being heroic or redeeming even if he IS telling the truth. All Desmond was for Charlie/Claire was a prophet of doom. It wasn't Desmonds fault (don't shoot the messenger) but it didn't make Desmond heroic and honourable either. He failed to save Charlie and the vision of Claire/Aarons rescue also failed. If I was Desmond I would be feeling more 'failure' than redeemed hero.

Even though Desmond couldn't go through with sacrificing Charlie in Catch-22 it wasn't like Desmond was appologising proffusely afterwards. He actually said "I was supposed to let you die Charlie" like saving him had been a mistake. So I think it is possible Desmond could have lied. Whether Des lied or told the truth it is just plain bad writing that they haven't addressed this issue in S4.

quizzical
06-04-2008, 08:47 PM
I don't see Desmonds role in this Charlie/Claire story as being heroic or redeeming even if he IS telling the truth. All Desmond was for Charlie/Claire was a prophet of doom. It wasn't Desmonds fault (don't shoot the messenger) but it didn't make Desmond heroic and honourable either. He failed to save Charlie and the vision of Claire/Aarons rescue also failed. If I was Desmond I would be feeling more 'failure' than redeemed hero.

I didn't mean telling the truth to Charlie was redeeming in and of itself - I phrased that poorly. I meant that telling the truth and not acting in a self-serving manner was an indication that Desmond was already past the "flawed" part of his character arch; he was redeemed by turning the failsafe key, and had moved on to the "Get back to Penny" phase of his story. Redemption means that, as a character, Desmond would be tempted but would make heroic and morally correct decisions. He would save Charlie's life, instead of sacrificing it to see Penny at the parachute drop. He would tell the truth and offer Charlie the option to save everyone, instead of hiding it, or trying to trick Charlie into making the choice most beneficial to Desmond. It makes Charlie's choice the central part of Charlie's arch alone, and not about Desmond (which I find appropriate to the gravity of Charlie's decision). In this scenario, Desmond, as you said, is merely the messenger.

Even though Desmond couldn't go through with sacrificing Charlie in Catch-22 it wasn't like Desmond was apologizing profusely afterwards. He actually said "I was supposed to let you die Charlie" like saving him had been a mistake. So I think it is possible Desmond could have lied. Whether Des lied or told the truth it is just plain bad writing that they haven't addressed this issue in S4.I agree, Desmond could have lied; I'm not making an argument for or against at the moment. My focus was on what a lie or the truth would indicate about where Desmond is in his development as a character in a story with two great big chapters left to write.

capitan_mission
06-04-2008, 10:17 PM
I believe in Desmond's vision, he saw claire and aaron in the helicopter, but he dosent know when this happen, like the scene in Flashes before you eyes, the footbal game, he have a vision, but not the details.

havok579257
06-05-2008, 02:17 AM
When?? When Aaron's 15 years old??? Taller ghost Aaron? We already know Desmond can't see BABY AARON/. The dude's at least three years old and he's yet to get off the island with Claire. Geez..

Unlike any other vision...Desmond was SUPER SPECIFIC as to what he told Charlie.

DO you think Charlie would have chosen to drown if Desmond had not said...SPECIFICALLY that he saw Claire and Aaron get on the chopper?

You need to goback and look at every description of every vision that is known... and watch the progression. First its either/or, either Charlie dies, or Desmond intervenes. Then they progress to If/Then. If Charlie dies, Penny arrives. If Charlie doesn't die, then Penny doesn't arrive.

So the final one...Let Charlie die, via the Looking Glass, and Penny and Desmond will be united...THAT'S WHAT HE SAW. We haven't seen it, but I'm 98% sure we will. Desmond saw himself with Penny in that vision whcih he claims saves Claire.

He lied.

Still working on that other thing.....cause I think its a case of mis-communication but I don't have time now. I don't have time for THIS now, I just chose to take a break, as it were.


You have no facts to back up your claims, so its not a lie, its your opinion. **edited**

Here are the facts.

1. We have only actually seen one of Desmond's visions.
2. Every vision he talked about has come true.
3. He has NEVER lied about a vision before.
4. Desmond was only specific in what he saw in the vision which falls in line perfectly from Catch-22. He didn't tell us his vision but we actually saw it and it was just as specific as the one he told Charlie.
5. Desmond already had another vision where in if Charlie dies, Penny shows up. It was in Catch-22. Yet even with it being Penny if he let Charlie die, he still saved his life. So we know for a fact when Desmond was presented with an similar instance of saving Charlie and Penny not being the one to parachute down or letting him die and it be Penny, he chose to save Charlie.


**edtied** I presented 5 cold, hard facts to you about why its not a lie. If you can present cold hard facts and not just opinion then I'll change my tune**edited**

lostorfound
06-05-2008, 03:52 AM
Same posts, new thread. Most of us have been arguing over lying, mistaken, vision yet to be seen for a loooonnnnggg time and the answer remains the same...Wait and see.

What has changed is that Desmond is now off the Island. I have a feeling that the Claire helicopter vision is around to haunt back home as well. I can see Des eventually realizing what the key to that vision is and the key will require him to get back to the Island as well.

Desmond's "I'll never leave you again" to Penny was a bit too ominous for me. He's leaving again to go back to the Island and play out or correct his vision.

UnsungHero108
06-05-2008, 07:30 AM
How do we know that his vision wasn't changed by someone else? What if Claire was *supposed* to be on the chopper with Aaron, but Christian intervened? He certainly seems capable of that..

middlenamewayne
06-05-2008, 09:15 AM
There's always the possibility that the O-6 have to return to the island on a mission to "make it never was", right? Unlikely, I guess, but that is one scenario that could result in Claire and baby Aaron leaving the island on a helicopter...

- mnw

CrazyLatin007
06-05-2008, 10:05 AM
Same posts, new thread. Most of us have been arguing over lying, mistaken, vision yet to be seen for a loooonnnnggg time and the answer remains the same...Wait and see.

What has changed is that Desmond is now off the Island. I have a feeling that the Claire helicopter vision is around to haunt back home as well. I can see Des eventually realizing what the key to that vision is and the key will require him to get back to the Island as well.

Desmond's "I'll never leave you again" to Penny was a bit too ominous for me. He's leaving again to go back to the Island and play out or correct his vision.

Considering that:

Ben is looking for Penny to kill her
Ben can never go back to the islandThen the only guaranteed safe place for Penny is the island.

Perhaps this little fact will be found out by Desmond and Penny and they'll be island-bound where the vision of Claire and Aaron can come true.

Pythagoras99
06-05-2008, 10:34 AM
What has changed is that Desmond is now off the Island. I have a feeling that the Claire helicopter vision is around to haunt back home as well. I can see Des eventually realizing what the key to that vision is and the key will require him to get back to the Island as well.

Desmond's "I'll never leave you again" to Penny was a bit too ominous for me. He's leaving again to go back to the Island and play out or correct his vision.
I agree that he's island-bound, but for different reasons...

Considering that:
Ben is looking for Penny to kill her
Ben can never go back to the islandThen the only guaranteed safe place for Penny is the island.

Perhaps this little fact will be found out by Desmond and Penny and they'll be island-bound where the vision of Claire and Aaron can come true.
I think they're already island-bound...
Jack: "Are you sure about this."
Desmond: "Aye, as long as I have Penny, I'll be fine."
Jack: "Don't let them find you."

So Penny and Des are going into hiding together, because they figure that whoever faked the crash will probably want Desmond dead. And they're going to a place that would make Jack say, in effect, "are you sure that's where you want to go?" So I think he will be around to witness Claire and Aaron getting on a helo in season 6. But he doesn't believe he has to go back to make that happen or anything.

3. He has NEVER lied about a vision before.
Well, just to be fair, he has lied several times to conceal that he was having visions, but you're right, he's never lied about the contents.

You are correct when you point out that he is a flawed hero. The question is, where are we in his character arch?
That's the point exactly, which presents several reasons why Desmond didn't lie. Desmond's character flaw has been cowardice. His "hero moment" was when he overcame that cowardice and turned the failsafe key. He is already redeemed. He proved that again by attempting to sacrifice his life to save Charlie. The most telling indication that he didn't lie is that in his mourning for Charlie, and all the times that Charlie is mentioned, or Claire, he has shown no signs of guilt or misgivings for his own actions. He knew he did everything he possibly could for Charlie.

Whether Des lied or told the truth it is just plain bad
writing that they haven't addressed this issue in S4.
I vociferously object to that. If they had addressed it, we wouldn't be talking about it, would we?. Life doesn't provide instant clarification, and neither should art.

I don't think it's enough of an ambiguity to require clarification in the first place, but ultimately, I do not think it will be addressed until Desmond sees Claire getting on a helo in season 6, with a smile of recognition and happiness for Charlie.

dpillie
06-05-2008, 11:27 AM
The sad part of all this is that Desmond is really an unwitting accomplice to Widmore, and I wonder if some of the time issues are going to start coming into play.

If the island has the power to move things and people through time, then could it be possible that Jacob could exist outside time? After all, only fools are constrained by time and space. Could it be that Jacob saw Charlie as a threat because he knew that Charlie would be the one to go through the looking glass?

So why go after Charlie when you could go after Desmond? I think Desmond must have some protection, perhaps due to the "rules" that were in place between Ben and Widmore. But as much as I really like Desmond, I think he's an unwitting pawn of Widmore.

All the direction he's received that resulted in him breaking his engagement came from off-island people that could be connected to Widmore
He arrived on the island indirectly as a result of Widmore's influence
He triggered the failsafe that put the island "on the map," albeit however briefly
He started having visions immediately after triggering the failsafe and through these visions was able to keep Charlie alive, find Widmore's agent, and fully reveal the island's location.

All this time, Jacob apparently gives no instructions regarding Desmond to Ben and the Others. There seems to be some dispute as to when Ben and company learned about the Swan. There was some indication early that they didn't know about it, but quite frankly it's hard to believe that they would know about every single other station and not know about the Swan. In Expose it was revealed that they knew how to remotely view activity in the Swan, so they could have been aware of at least Kelvin.

So was the Charlie/Desmond story arc just foreshadowing of the larger conflict between the forces of the island vs. the forces of man - or is Desmond being used as a course-correcting agent to reveal the island that has been hidden by unnatural means?

Captain_Falafel
06-05-2008, 12:21 PM
I vociferously object to that. If they had addressed it, we wouldn't be talking about it, would we?. Life doesn't provide instant clarification, and neither should art.


The only reason I am talking about this issue is because it is a massive ugly plot hole which destroys the value of Charlies sacrifice and has Desmond acting completely out of character. In S3 Desmond was shown to be very troubled about Charlies situation. Desmond assured Charlie several times that his sacrifice would achieve rescue for Claire/Aaron and offered to go in Charlies place so he could be with Claire. It makes no sense for Desmond to not care or even react to Claire/Aarons lack of rescue. Personally I think it is extremely bad writing.

Madge
06-05-2008, 12:32 PM
Well haven't seen Claire doing much greiving either and she was the reason Charlie went down there. That's more of a crime if you ask me. And then she gave the baby away.
I don't see how Charlie's sacrifice has been diminished in anyway. He died trying to save Claire and his friends and just because it didn't happen in the way we expected it to doesn't make his noble gesture less noble. He was still a hero who gave his life for Claire and Aaron.

branders0n
06-05-2008, 12:48 PM
Well haven't seen Claire doing much greiving either and she was the reason Charlie went down there. That's more of a crime if you ask me. And then she gave the baby away.
I don't see how Charlie's sacrifice has been diminished in anyway. He died trying to save Claire and his friends and just because it didn't happen in the way we expected it to doesn't make his noble gesture less noble. He was still a hero who gave his life for Claire and Aaron.
I agree, Charlie's actions were completely selfless and heroic. I just think Desmond wasn't entirely truthful with what he saw.

Madge
06-05-2008, 12:58 PM
But how does that diminsh Charlie's sacrifice as so many people have said? It may put a shadow on Des, but not Charlie.

Captain_Falafel
06-05-2008, 01:00 PM
I don't see how Charlie's sacrifice has been diminished in anyway. He died trying to save Claire and his friends and just because it didn't happen in the way we expected it to doesn't make his noble gesture less noble. He was still a hero who gave his life for Claire and Aaron.

I agree about Charlies heroism, but I'm complaining about the storytelling here. The writers hyped up that Charlie's death was going to be a big important sacrifice for the greater good. They asked the viewers to care about Charlie, his list, his ring, Claire and Aarons rescue, the reason he was sacrificing himself, etc - then they swept all these things under the carpet as if they didn't matter. I've never felt more cheated by a story.

It also makes the whole "redemption" theme seem cruel and futile. Charlie redeemed himself big time - what was his reward? To be killed by the fate/universe and not even by granted his dying wish or recieve an recognition from his friends for his heroism (a funeral maybe?). Why should the characters even bother trying to be good people when the island is this merciless?

too2strange
06-05-2008, 01:18 PM
The only reason I am talking about this issue is because it is a massive ugly plot hole which destroys the value of Charlies sacrifice and has Desmond acting completely out of character. In S3 Desmond was shown to be very troubled about Charlies situation. Desmond assured Charlie several times that his sacrifice would achieve rescue for Claire/Aaron and offered to go in Charlies place so he could be with Claire. It makes no sense for Desmond to not care or even react to Claire/Aarons lack of rescue. Personally I think it is extremely bad writing.

The fact you (so many of you!!) are so passionate about this makes the writing that GOOD! You have just summerized what everyone on this thread has been saying... except about the writing being bad. Some people just said confusing. However... Excellent job!

I've read through all the responses here... WOW! So much passion for both Des and Charlie! Several people mentioned free-will, lieing, and that Desmond BELIEVES Charlie has no choice!

One thing no one has considered yet! It might help everyone! It is only a theory, but I have to spoiler font it, because we have not been shown this example, yet. I'm thinking very soon. Ooops, have to rescue a toddler, be right back....

Swan Orientation video: "The DHARMA Initiative was created in 1970, and is the brainchild of Gerald and Karen DeGroot, two doctoral candidates at the University of Michigan. Following in the footsteps of visionaries such as B.F. Skinner, (?) imagined a large-scale communal research compound where scientists and free-thinkers from around the globe could pursue research in meteorology, psychology, parapsychology, zoology, electromagnetism, and utopian social..."

Okay, so what? You all did notice the picture of Ms. Hawkings on the Monk's desk, yes? Does Ben want Des to save Charlie's life and get everyone off the Island? Does Widmore want Desmond off the Island and back with Penny? Who benefits from Charlie's death?

It benefits both Ben and Widmore if Des just keeps pushing that darn button. First, it gives Widmore a chance to find the Island. I believe Widmore put Libby up to sending Des on that boat, which I also believe had a GPS on it.

Second, Desmond has been haunted by Widmore's manipulation for years.

Was it just coincidence that he met Ms. Hawkings? The monks are connected with Widmore and Ms. Hawkings.
Poor Desmond... I believe he was just an experiment on the human mind and was manipulated into believeing he couldn't change Charlie's future. However, Desmond's heart won over and I believe we shall see this in a future espisode. Which would explain Desmonds constant battle with his visions. Following his heart instead of Widmore's mind conditioning.

Evil villians: Oh, I believe we have some real EVIL villians on this show :mad: ...and Des and Chuck are not one of them. :)

Charlie and Desmond really did resuce everyone! Have faith people!

Remember what Charlie said to Hurley, "Yes, I'm dead, but I'm also here." Here?
Here? LOL! This is a different thread. Check out the Wormhole theories if you want more!

branders0n
06-05-2008, 01:29 PM
But how does that diminsh Charlie's sacrifice as so many people have said? It may put a shadow on Des, but not Charlie.
I don't think it diminishes Charlie's sacrifice at all. He still made the decision to dive down and give his life for what he thought was Claire and Aaron's rescue. Honestly, until we know why Claire is now with Christian, she is the one who has tainted his sacrifice by not leaving the island.

too2strange
06-05-2008, 01:45 PM
It may put a shadow on Des, but not Charlie.

Perhaps! Madge, I love your quote... The Hatch blew his cloths off... Just stop right there! No more needs to be said IMHO!! LOL! Love it!

Madge
06-05-2008, 02:06 PM
That line was from Lost in 8:15 IIRC. Loved it!

Well, I do hope that there's a resolution for those who are unhappy with how this turned out. I thought Charlie's death scene was touching and done well and he died being a sweetheart. At least they sent him off with a better farewell than many of the others received. I found it touching.
I would like to see the ring come back in to play.

hezekiah
06-05-2008, 02:44 PM
Again, where are you getting this being a lie from. What indication at all do we have that he lied. Other than it has yet to happen, but last I checked, just because it hasn't happened yet, doesn't mean it won't.

"Didn't see Claire on board that helicopter when it took off from the island to the freighter nor was she included in the Oceanic 6 and thus made it to the "real" world. Sice Desmond told Charlie BOTH Aaron and CLAIRE would be on the rescue helicopter I would say that he didn't tell Charlie the truth"
100%
The only reason I am talking about this issue is because it is a massive ugly plot hole which destroys the value of Charlies sacrifice and has Desmond acting completely out of character. In S3 Desmond was shown to be very troubled about Charlies situation. Desmond assured Charlie several times that his sacrifice would achieve rescue for Claire/Aaron and offered to go in Charlies place so he could be with Claire. It makes no sense for Desmond to not care or even react to Claire/Aarons lack of rescue. Personally I think it is extremely bad writing.

"I agree-albeit I would not say that it destroyed the value of Charlie's sacrifice. What Charlie BELIEVED at the time to be the reason for the sacrifice is important. That the sacrifice may not have been warranted in no way destroys the gesture."

Lost Ed
06-05-2008, 04:57 PM
Charlie's sacrifice was in no wise diminished by Desmond's lie. Charlie did the noble thing.

And then she (Claire) gave the baby away.


We don't know that.

We know Christian was holding Aaron.
We know Claire saw him.
We know Claire walked off into the jungle, according to Miles.
We know that Sawyer found Aaron by a tree, crying. (At least he wasn't sleeping, again.)

There are gaps in the storyline from Claire seeing Christian holding Aaron, until Aaron is in the jungle found by Sawyer. The only thing within that space of time is a simple line from Miles...she walked off in the jungle...she called him dad....

Was Christian still holding Aaron? Don't know.
Did Claire need to follow Christian to get Aaron back? Don't know.
Did Christian hand Aaron to Claire and the all went off on their merry way? Don't know.
Did she have a choice? Don't know.
Is she still alive? I personally, seriously doubt it, but truest answer is...don't know.

Did Desmond lie to Charlie? Oh yeah.

UnsungHero108
06-05-2008, 04:59 PM
It sorta like most of the replies here are directed about the merits of Charlie's death and why, not the actual premonitions..

We don't have much to go on, Des has said a couple times that things don't always pan out the way he initially saw them, "the picture is constantly changing" and whatnot. Did he say he saw himself with Charlie in the Looking Glass? Did he say Mikhail would use the grenade to blow open the window? For all we know those two factors weren't in his flash at all. ANYTHING could have changed the outcome.

The writers have planted stories since season 1 and tie them up later, I think this might be what's going to happen here. This show is full of surprises, I'm sure everything will make perfect sense later.

Lost Ed
06-05-2008, 05:09 PM
Des has said a couple times that things don't always pan out the way he initially saw them, "the picture is constantly changing" and whatnot.

Rehash: If that is true...then why was he so specific with Charlie's questioning?

Charlie questioning intensely because he knows about the changeability of the vision.

Desmond emphatic on the outcome.

Yes, definitly Claire and Aaron, or...not sure, its a jigsaw puzzle without the picture.

For those who refuse to accept the evidence...then why didn't Desmond just respond to Charlie about the vision the way he responded about previous visions.

Brotha, its a jigsaw puzzle, I'm not sure of the final outcome, but that's what I saw,

Claire and Aaron...

BTW: I am also 100% positive that all of this will get re-visited. Charlie's list, ring, this alleged vision....we're not done with it yet. Those who think it was bad plotting will eventually get plotted justice.

Madge
06-05-2008, 05:13 PM
Charlie's sacrifice was in no wise diminished by Desmond's lie. Charlie did the noble thing.



We don't know that.

We know Christian was holding Aaron.
We know Claire saw him.
We know Claire walked off into the jungle, according to Miles.
We know that Sawyer found Aaron by a tree, crying. (At least he wasn't sleeping, again.)

There are gaps in the storyline from Claire seeing Christian holding Aaron, until Aaron is in the jungle found by Sawyer. The only thing within that space of time is a simple line from Miles...she walked off in the jungle...she called him dad....

Was Christian still holding Aaron? Don't know.
Did Claire need to follow Christian to get Aaron back? Don't know.
Did Christian hand Aaron to Claire and the all went off on their merry way? Don't know.
Did she have a choice? Don't know.
Is she still aliv