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Person of Interest - 3.16 - Review + Theories + Timeline & Events

5 Mar 2014

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(Check out my website, www.seriesmonitor.com)

Tonight's Person of Interest was a piece of television of sublime quality, unlike anything I've seen before. Titled 'RAM', it was written by Nic Van Zeebroeck and Michael Sopczynski, a duo who have written 5 episodes together, and directed by Stephen Surjik, who has directed two previous episodes.

For relative newcomers to the series, or those who struggle to keep pace with the most complex storyline on television, here's a basic wrap of everything that happened in this episode, along with how it relates to the storyline of the entire series, which will hopefully help you keep up to speed.

Veteran viewers of the first season will have noticed that the opening title sequence in tonight's episode was straight from season 1. Word for word, clip for clip, up to the point where the title sequence begins rewinding.

The episode opens in 2010, with Dillinger, a guy who served much the same role that John Reese does today. After saving a damsel in distress, he is summoned to the library where we see Harold Finch sitting at his computer, in a wheelchair, wearing the same glasses he wore in the pilot, but were not seen again except in flashbacks.


Some important background information here. September 26, 2010 was the date that Finch was injured in a car bomb blast which killed his long time friend, Nathan Ingram. According to the fastforward scene at the end of the episode, the events in this episode probably occurred in December. Finch was in hospital in both January and February 2011, when he would have had spinal fusion surgery to repair the back injury caused by the bar bomb. Furthermore, Finch used the bomb blast to fake his death to his fiance, Grace Hendricks.

Right, let's get back to the action. In the opening moments after he saved the damsel in distrss, Dillinger suggested to Finch he get a dog. Dillinger comes across as rather arrogant, inquisitive and pushy, making Finch work rather hard to keep the level of privacy he prefers. Dillinger also likes getting paid, which runs with his overall arrogance. Nothing like John Reese, that's for sure.

The next number that comes up is that of Daniel Casey. Casey is a former tiger team specialist. They specialize in breaking into systems so their owners can find out about any security flaws and the like. Casey has a friend in Lester Strickland who does the same sort of work, but additionally specializes in false documents.

At the same time as Dillinger is trailing Casey, so are CIA buddies Kara Stanton and John Reese. Viewers present back in season 2 will note that Stanton is now deceased, along with the pair's CIA handler, Mark Snow.

A Chap named Lambert turns up, impersonating Ian Banks in a meeting with Casey. Ian Banks is a member of the SSCI, or the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. Dillinger and Finch listen in on the conversation which doesn't lead anywhere. Casey feels uneasy and leaves, with Dillinger in hot pursuit. The pair are confronted by Reese and Stanton, who have their eyes on Casey. However a crew associated with Lambert storms the party and engages in a shootout. The crew is killed but Lambert himself escapes. As do Dillinger and Casey, who head to Finch's library.

On the way back, Casey tells Dillinger, with Finch listening, that two months prior, he was asked to test a system for weaknesses. The system was located in a bunker somewhere in the Pacific North West and was the most advanced system he had ever seen. Finch tries to hush the conversation with some urgency which makes Dillinger suspicious.

Back at the library, Dillinger is not impressed by the situation. Finch sends him outside - an order he follows, but not before he bugs the room with a microphone placed on an empty magazine from his gun.

Scene switch now, to Pennsylvania 2, aka Sepcial Counsel, in his office, when Control abruptly enters, demanding an explanation from him as to why his team (Reese and Stanton) failed to neutralize Daniel Casey. Control suggests she should have dealt with the situation in-house, but Special Counsel disagrees, saying that getting the CIA to do the job protects them and Northern Lights.

But things get mighty interesting here, when Control says "If Casey had done his job, and we had access to Northern Lights, we could find him in a heartbeat, or anyone else for that matter". This is vitally important, because it implies that The Machine (the project to build it was codenamed Northern Lights) was not operational in 2011, when we were previously told that it was prepped for delivery in 2009.

It gets better, when Special Counsel responds to Control by saying "All due respect ma'am, we might not be in this situation if we hadn’t killed Nathan Ingram. Who better to provide unfettered access to the source than the man who built it." This means that it was definitely the decision of Control to kill Nathan Ingram. This wasn't known for certain previously, other than the fact that Hersh, an employee of Special Counsel, staged the bombing to kill Ingram. Control isn't done yet, when she says "Nathan Ingram outlived his usefulness and was dealt with accordingly."

Some more background here. Ingram had programmed a back door named 'Contingency' into The Machine before it was delivered. The back door was designed to feed the numbers from the irrelevant list to Ingram, who, before he was killed, acted as a vigilante himself and tried to protect those on its irrelevant list. Finch, at the time, wholeheartedly disagreed with the idea and locked Ingram's access. However in the seconds before he did this, Nathan Ingram's own number came up, suggesting he was in iminent danger. Ingram died in the bomb blast shortly after. Today, Finch gets his numbers in the same way Ingram received his, using the same back door that Ingram programmed.

All of this shows that The Machine was indeed active in 2010, but it appears that the government agencies, and Control and Special Counsel, were not getting what they wanted - if anything at all - from The Machine around this time, but Ingram, and later Finch, were. My theory here is that The Machine went on strike following Ingram's death in an attempt to prevent itself from being misused, and the government wanted The Machine back online, so they enlisted Daniel Casey to get it to resume operations.

Further background here. In 2011, Samantha Shaw eliminated Daniel Aquino. Aquino was one of the people who played a part in the Northern Lights project. When he was deemed a loose end, by the orders of Special Counsel, he was framed for selling designs of a nuclear centrifuge to Hezbollah, with the idea being that The Machine would track him on the relevant list, and the ISA (Intelligence Support Activity) of which Shaw was a member, would do the honors of neutralizing him. That means The Machine was doing its job at that point.

Getting back to the episode, Daniel Casey found the back door when he was testing the system. The Machine was smarter though, and locked him out. Casey came to the conclusion that the government didn't want the system to be tested, they wanted to break into it - furthermore supporting the theory that they weren't getting anything from The Machine at the time. Casey was later scheduled to be killed but miraculously survived a car crash which killed his executioners, and he was able to escape with the laptop containing the code to the back door. One wonders how such an oversight could be made if Casey had the laptop even when he was about to be killed, which makes me think that laptop was destined for somewhere else following Casey's death.

Meanwhile, Finch was tweaking the code on the laptop in the library. He decided to sell the laptop to protect Casey in the hope that the laptop was more important than Casey's life. However, Finch would have been doing much more than simple tweaking. Rather, he would have been modifying the code to tell The Machine to go it alone. More background on that later.

From the earlier shootout with Lambert's crew, Stanton and Reese interrogate one of the crew members who did not succumb to the shootout. After telling the pair nothing, the man jumps from the window. However before that, we hear his voice. He is definitely English or Scottish. That's important too, and again, more on that later. The crew member dies though, after he catches Reese and Stanton off guard and out a window to his death.

Back in Finch's library, Dillinger returns, and reveals that he overheard the conversation Finch had with Casey. Finch is overcome by a sleeping drug placed in his tea, and Dillinger tells Casey to run. Dillinger takes the laptop to a meeting with a group of Chinese buyers in Central Park, but before he can get there, Finch tracks him down and tries to dissuade Dillinger, though to no avail. He watches on as Dillinger is shot through the heart, and all but one of the Chinese buyers succumbs to the same fate. Out of the shadows comes none other than Samantha Shaw, who was trained by Hersh.

Meanwhile, Daniel Casey was on his way to Lester's place when Reese stops him in his tracks. Stanton, while holding Lester hostage, is interrupted by Lambert and another couple of crew members. For the second time, all but Lambert meet their end, and Lester follows them to the same fate too. However, outside, Reese spares Casey's life, while Finch watches on from a car nearby. Stanton and Reese get in a car where their next mission awaits, in Morocco - or so they thought.

Back in Special Counsel's office, he confirms to Control that the laptop has been traced to a software company based in Ordos, China. In a separate scene, Lambert informs Greer of the same information. The Machine is aware as well, and can be seen tracking the conversation and the threat to its operations. Control orders the destruction of the laptop by sending Reese and Stanton to Ordos, where they were set up to kill each other.

This is where any newcomers or those who struggle to follow the storyline might feel a bit lost. In 2010, Reese and Stanton were in China, at the software company's headquarters, when they realized that they had been set up by their own people. They managed to escape an airstrike on the facility, but Stanton was badly injured and spent a year in a Chinese hospital under the supervision of Greer, from Decima Technologies. Reese made his way back to the US, but was too late to save his former girlfriend, Jessica Arndt, from being killed by her husband.

Arndt worked as a nurse in a hospital. Before he went to China, Reese received a call from her, asking for help. His request for leave from the CIA was denied, and it probably cost her her life. After he managed to get back to the US, Reese rushed to the hospital where Jessica worked. While he was there, he bumped into the then wheelchair bound Harold Finch, who was recovering from his spinal fusion surgery.

Sometime later, in 2011, is when the series pilot is set. Reese, an alcoholic living on the streets, is harassed by a group of youths on a subway, who he promptly dispatches. It is none other than Harold Finch who provided him with a lawyer and removed him from the police station where the now deceased Detective Joss Carter had been questioning him. He was whisked away to a meeting with Finch, and the rest, as they say, is history. But one thing is for certain. John Reese has lasted a lot longer than Dillinger.

Later in the series, after recovering from her injuries, Kara Stanton returns to the US to plant a virus in a DOD facility. The virus is from Decima, and uses code from the laptop obtained from the Chinese, but modified by Finch. That is what initiated things for The Machine to develop a mind of its own and take steps to ensure its own survival, the impacts of which are being felt to this day

Like I said at the beginning of this review, this episode was incredible. The creative team behind this amazing television series are highly talented, daring, and knowledgeable. They had created a masterpiece by the end of the first season, and it has only got better as time has passed. Tonight's episode has again taken things to an entirely new level.

However let's not forget the final scene of the episode, where Root knocks on Daniel Casey's cottage door and begins rigging the place to blow. He is given a location and a name, and told to leave now. Who knows where things are heading from here.

Thanks so much for reading. Hopefully this has helped refresh some memories and bring others up to speed with the best series on television. Feel free to share your thoughts and spin your theories in the comments below. Remember you can see full ratings, an episode guide, and a comprehensive Character Relationship Chart on my website, www.seriesmonitor.com/personofinterest

Jimmy

About the Author - Jimmy Ryan
Jimmy Ryan lives in New Zealand. He is an avid follower of drama television and has a keen interest for television ratings and statistics. Some of his favorite shows right now are Person of Interest, Scandal, House of Cards, Orphan Black, The Blacklist, and Castle. You can visit his television ratings website, www.seriesmonitor.com or follow him on Twitter, @SeriesMonitor.


43 comments:

  1. Great review Jimmy. This episode blew my mind. The way they connected everything from the past to the present was just amazing. And that flash sequence within the Machine summarizing the entire 3 season storyline near the end was just incredible. I'm torn about what you said about the Machine not working in 2010. When Control said that, I interpreted it as they wanted Casey to hack in so that they could access the Machine and therefore gain control of it for more power, etc., like she told Root in Aletheia. Control thought the Machine was hers. I'm not sure if the timeline maybe was slightly flawed in that way (which is somewhat doubtful considering how detailed the writing team has shown themselves to be multiple times) or if you're right and there is a little mystery in there. Anyway, great review and definitely one of the best episodes of the series. My parents are really going to need my expertise when I show them this one lol.

    ReplyDelete
  2. @Tyler Maltby:disqus Haha thanks so much for that! Yeah there's so many ways things can be twisted and interpreted but I think this episode cleared a lot of theories up. It was so good to watch.

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  3. Great review, but Control meant having control over the machine. It was operational, since they'd be no numbers if it wasn't.

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  4. Bryan Nathanson5 March 2014 at 10:45

    Actually, the Machine was operational and fully working, not on strike. What Control meant by access to the Machine and "finding him in a heartbeat" was that she wanted to see what the Machine sees and get access to its info, which Finch expressly forbade, hence the heavy encryption and black box nature. Casey was meant to bypass this so they could look into the Machine and track people they wanted.

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  5. Though this makes sense, what doesn't is the fact that The Machine sent Daniel Casey's number to Finch, and not to Control. Daniel had some source code on a laptop for Gods sake. The Chinese were after him and Decima was after him. Control should have got his number because it was relevant, not Finch, which suggests to me that The Machine was "on strike" and trying to protect its own by sending Casey's number to Finch.


    There's tons of ways to look at this storyline. That's what Iove about the show.

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  6. This show is genius

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  7. Or maybe it can be interpreted that both Decima & Northern Lights were after Casey (NL because they're pretty draconian with how they deal with the thinest cracks in security & with the kind of work he was entrusted to do, he'd eventually ask questions & would need to be silenced ). Either way, the kid would likely end up dead, Which is possibly why it put him on Finch's radar, who will bend over backwards to protect him.

    As you remember, even the whole Ferry bombing was a relevant threat. Done to the purpose to silence Nathan, whose number came up as Irrelevant.

    You could lose your mind trying to analyze this, but would not regret it in the least. :)

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  8. The location that Root tells Casey to go to is Cartegena, Colombia (the same place where she told ex-Vigilance analyst Jason Greenfield in Mors Praematura after saving him from Collier. Why? Because he's "Necessary".)

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  9. Maybe it's because relevant cases are acts of terrorism while nathen and Casey are important regarding the machine it's not like thier actions would have put a mass amount of people in instant danger. I think that's the line of relevant and irrelevant. Does that make any sense

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  10. Great post Jimmy, thanks for writing.

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  11. Great Review Jimmy! I agree with your theory about the machine going on strike after Ingram's death (It's the only thing that makes sense), although I still wonder if there'sa missing piece of some bigger war here, because Control seemed to imlply that the machine (or the program) was hers and that Finch stole it??. I'm confused though about the date Reese left the CIA, -wasn't there an episode that stated that it was later in 2010 or am I not remembering correctly?

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  12. The show makes us think so hard... guess that's why the brain's was added to the human anatomy.

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  13. Good work on the review, Jimmy.


    One note: I believe TPTB have "officially" changed Shaw's given name to Sameen. That's what's given in the latest press releases.

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  14. Aha! I thought there must have been an underlying reason for that particular destination. I think I'll be rewatching Mors Prematura tonight then!

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  15. László Harsányi5 March 2014 at 22:33

    I agree, I think Control's problem wasn't that they didn't get Relevant informations - their goal was to get information about anybody who THEY think relevant, in other words who can be a thorn in their side. That was not the purpose of the Machine, so they wanted to hack it.


    And if we are going on the way of blowing up our mind - the code on the laptop eventually was a virus, intended to save the Machine - had the Machine had any idea about it? Maybe that was the reason why he wanted to protect Casey but didn't "feel" it important to relay the theft as a relevant threat to Control?

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  16. László Harsányi5 March 2014 at 22:34

    "You could lose your mind trying to analyze this, but would not regret it in the least. :)"


    Perfectly summarized why this is one of the best show now on screen.

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  17. So that's where that name came from! When I heard Root say it, it didn't sound familiar but I knew it had to be a reference to something and I couldn't figure it out. Now I know! Like Jimmy, I think I'll be rewatching Mors Praematura soon.

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  18. László Harsányi6 March 2014 at 09:10

    The change is clearly official, the question is the reason? I mean not why it has been changed in the PR realeases, but why did they changed it in the show? Samantha was a common name, while Sameen is either an Urdu or an Islamic name (means Precious). We knew that in her childhood they moved so much, she had no time to really pick a tv show to love. We also knew that when her father had died her mother had lived yet, the paramedics called her - but we don't know anything else about them.

    I think we will learn why she changed her name somewhere between her medical internship and her carreer assassin path (note: only her first name, not her last, so it was probably not for having an alias), in a show like PoI it doesn't happen just because of lazy writing.

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  19. or maybe they didn't want us to confuse Root and Shaw (two Samanthas)

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  20. Tomáš Petrík6 March 2014 at 12:34

    As soon as I heard the words in the intro were those from season one, I knew this episode would be extraordinary!

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  21. Great review! I found one more funny detail:
    "Veteran viewers
    of the first season will have noticed that the opening title sequence
    in tonight's episode was straight from season 1. Word for word, clip for
    clip, up to the point where the title sequence begins rewinding."

    Actually, it was not. It missed one sentence removed after season 1: "people like you" after "Violent crimes
    involving ordinary people."
    Maybe the audience didn't want to hear that people like us commit crimes. :)

    And another thing:
    "This is vitally
    important, because it implies that The Machine (the project to build it
    was codenamed Northern Lights) was not operational in 2011, when we
    were previously told that it was prepped for delivery in 2009. (...) All of this
    shows that The Machine was indeed active in 2010, but it appears that
    the government agencies, and Control and Special Counsel, were not
    getting what they wanted - if anything at all - from The Machine around
    this time, but Ingram, and later Finch, were. My theory here is that The
    Machine went on strike following Ingram's death"
    It was operational and the Government received relevant numbers (so it was online - there was no strike, c'mon, that's ridiculous. It wasn't set free yet and why would it end it's strike then?), but they wanted more - full access to any data collected by the Machine (camera recordings etc).

    "Stanton and Reese get in a car where their next mission awaits, in Morocco - or so they thought."
    Well... actually it was in Morocco. They were sent to Ordos after that.

    "He is definitely English or Scottish. That's important too, and again, more on that later."
    Am I the only one who doesn't see the continuation?

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  22. Noooo, you're wrong. Daniel Casey's number was irrelevant, because it meant only one person's death. Relevant numbers are numbers connected to a strike which can cause multiple deaths.

    What is more, the Machine predicted Daniel Casey's DEATH (and it was the only thing that it did before it was set free - predicting deaths), which would have been absolutely irrelevant. What was relevant (as you implied) was Daniel Casey's POSSESSING a laptop containing some part of the Machine's code. But he didn't want to use it to kill anyone, so let's say the Machine didn't care. ;)

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  23. "although I still wonder if there'sa missing piece of some bigger war here" - there's nothing missing. The Gov wanted full access to all the resources that the Machine collects. Finch allowed them only to receive numbers connected to threats to the national security. I thought it was clear - the whole season 1 focused on that topic :) There was no strike. The Machine wasn't free, it served as it was told.

    "Control seemed to imlply that the machine (or the program) was hers and that Finch stole it" - she meant the season 2 finale and the empty hideout.

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  24. "she meant the season 2 finale and the empty hideout."


    Are you sure, because it seemed like she meant longer termed? It would have been more clear if she would of said "moved" the program and/or she wouldn't have used "my" to express ownership...

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  25. Thank you! I though there was, but I will just ignore that and take it as a continuity error. :)

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  26. Tomáš Petrík6 March 2014 at 13:11

    All good points. Also, I think the reviewer forgot or did not notice that Root is sending Daniel to see Jason Greenfield, Timothy Sloan's brother.

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  27. To be honest, she was never once called "Samantha" on screen. Cole called her "Sam", which is also short for Sameen. My rule is, unless it's mentioned by the characters, it's not official.


    Like Greer. With RAM, his name was officially revealed on screen. Until then, I was pretty much calling him Uncle John.

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  28. Well... IMO there's no reason to complicate the situation. Control said "stole" because:
    a) it's a stronger word :)
    b) she's the head of ISA so practically the Machine was her ownership. Then, she lost it due to Finch's actions. Isn't that a definition of stealing?
    c) she's an egoist. :)
    d) she didn't have a better word for it. Remember, it was Hersh who heard Finch's explanation of what happened (virus, moving the Machine etc) and he's rather not a tech-guy so he might have misunderstood the actual process.

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  29. yup, SRJ mentioned that above

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  30. And there are still two unanswered question:

    - how did Greer know Finch's last name (Dillinger might have used his name but I thought he only knew "Harold", not "Finch")?
    - where did Finch meet Reese in the first place?

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  31. 1. Dillinger called him Finch in the episode (It's Saturday, Finch). He used Harold's name while dealing with the Chinese. All Greer had was a name. No photograph, physical description, nothing.


    2. The first time Reese officially met Finch was the pilot. How Harold knew about him in RAM is yet to be answered.

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  32. Tomáš Petrík6 March 2014 at 13:46

    Oh, okay :)

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  33. I see your point!

    "b) she's the head of ISA so practically the Machine was her ownership. Then, she lost it due to Finch's actions. Isn't that a definition of stealing?"



    To some degree, but wouldn't she know that Harold and Nathan built the machine and that Ingram sold it to Government (thus it was never originally hers, -unless she goes further back with these MIT guys than we think? (Not to say that she's not a righteous character, but more over did Control learn about Northern Lights from the Special Council or is it the other way? Do we know how she knows about it?)


    I mean even in some of these more recant episodes, we see the flashbacks with Finch already being in trouble with the the Government (FBI) at a pretty young age. I would assume there is a deeper history here than what we have seen....

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  34. László Harsányi6 March 2014 at 20:11

    It's two different thing we are talking about. The things and info which are in the official PR materials may not be canon, but those are the official facts at that point about the show. So if Shaw was named "Samantha" in the second season on the cast sheets and info bulletins, and now she is called "Sameen" it means that this particular reference has changed. Now whether it was a change behind the scene (ie: "change her name, I don't like it"), or a change rooted in the storyline, we will see.

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  35. @Mr. M : 7) The President of the United States?

    @DarthLocke4 emm... The Government (the President or someone else, doesn't matter) wanted a machine to spy everyone. So they created ISA and hired Control to lead it. Then Control hired Weeks to make a deal with, well, anyone capable of creating it. And Control as the person leading ISA and controlling ( :) ) the Machine felt like it was her possession. It is really that simple.

    " just not when she first learned of it and from whom"
    When? After 9/11. From whom? From the person that came up with the idea (or maybe she did - she might have been some kind of President's consultant, we don't know it).

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  36. I understand who Control and what the ISA is, but my point is that I do not think we know her actual background prior to the ISA and/or being "Control"...


    My original argument was about "if" it's possible that Finch actually did "steal" something from her (that the comment she made wasn't just about "moving" the machine) --- if there is a deeper history here between Control, Finch and/or his MIT friends (Arthur, Nathan, ect) and if she knew about the Machine anytime before she/ISA was tasked to create/find.


    It might be as simple as you say, but it's possible that it could be more complicate because we have a bunch of missing history in relation to her and in relation to Finch, ---Which really the story isn't about the Machine, as much as it about Finch.-That's why the history would matter.

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  37. I've already done something similar, but not an exact timeline per se
    seriesmonitor.com/personofinterest/otherstuff.html

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  38. "An asset in North Korea, a dissident group helped an injured CIA operative escape from a town near Ordos, China, may 2010." Snow - Evans, S01E20

    It is a mistake.

    "...town near Ordos, China, december 2010" -> solution.

    I'm sorry, i speak spanish, i use google translator... XD

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  39. Jimmy always give great reviews to us, excellent job man.

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  40. Geez Somebody should build a timeline chart for this before this show gets really complicated like the metal gear series

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  41. (Re: Ferry) The relevant aspect came when the guy Hersh was interrogating had originally planned to blow it up, causing mass casualties. They stopped him, yet let the attack happen in order to take out Nathan. It's the perfect example as to how relentless Northern Lights is to keep The Machine's existence secret.

    Casey was a target of Decima. By capturing him, they'd pretty much be one step away from accessing the Machine. Given their nature, they'd more or less try to abuse it, perpetually causing massive loss of life. That's RELEVANT. Since NL was trying to kill him too, because he has enough reason to doubt the existence of the Machine, his number was sent to Harold. Irrelevant.

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