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Sarenaty Sarenaty 10 June 2009
26

Locke is Locke and has always been Locke

I realize how strange this all is--me, here. But I assure you, Sun, I'm the same man I've always been.

That is what Locke said to Sun in "Dead is Dead". What did he mean by saying that? If we are to believe that Jacob's other is fake Locke, then the question is when did he become the shape of Locke?

If Locke is the "same man" he has always been, then he has always been fake Locke?

While re watching old episodes, I suddenly realized how desperate Locke was to remain on the island and it occured to me that the Locke we saw awaken on the beach may not have been "real Locke".

Any feedback? I am open to honest discussion.

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Sarenaty Sarenaty 5 June 2009
6

The statue may not be a depiction of Jacob

I have noticed some theories referring to the statue and Jacob as one. I don't think this is the case. Jacob lives in the foot of the statue he is not the deity depicted by the statue.

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Sarenaty Sarenaty 3 June 2009
5

Great deal for those who do not have Lost on DVD

I hope no one thinks this is an ad but I get emails from Barnes & Noble online store. You buy 2 DVDs and get 3rd for free.

http://video.barnesandnoble.com/search/results.asp?quickSearchType=TTL&FRM=0&quickSearchText=lost&box=lost&pos=6

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Sarenaty Sarenaty 2 June 2009
13

Are you sure that was Jacob?

When Jacob visits Kate, Sawyer, Locke, Jack, Sayid, Hurley, Jin & Sun, are we sure that it is Jacob.

If Jacob's other can take the shape and appearance of Locke, can he/it not take on the shape and appearance of Jacob?

Just a thought, the writers have screwed with us before and why not now?

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Sarenaty Sarenaty 21 May 2009
6

Progress anyone?

Sometime during the 1800s, a blond man is in a stone-columned room beneath the four-toed statue, spinning thread for a tapestry he is weaving. He is wearing a handmade white tunic and using a long-bladed knife. Outside on the beach, he snares a fish in a wicker trap, then fillets and cooks it on a rock over a fire. As he eats, he watches a ship sailing on the horizon. Another man, wearing a handmade black shirt, approaches him. He asks how the ship found the Island and accuses the blond man of having brought it there. The man claims that it "always ends the same," with destruction and corruption, when people are brought to the Island. The blond man replies that it only ends once and anything before that is just progress.

When Ben took Lockeā€¦

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