cereal...
But...that said, I would guess yes. This touches on what I meant by yesterday's comment about Locke not just surviving, but playing it (in all seriousness, not in any way where play=lightly). I don't mean to put forth he'd want to let Charlie go unhelped, but it seems to me from the little I've seen, Locke is looking to get his hooks in folks.
If Locke's only motivation is making people dependent on him, then why save Jack? He didn't just save him, he made him able to be a
leader.
Was he creating his own nemesis?
I don't get the feeling that Locke is out for power, per se, but rather, that he's coming into his own. When he talks, people listen now. He is able to provide for them, rather than be provided for. He can hunt, he can track, he can freaking
walk.
For him, that kind of transformation is exciting. If he thinks that the island has contributed to his healing, maybe he wants to share that with the others. Help them 'achieve their potential'.
It's like the Tony Robbins of land masses.
t /Devils Advocate.
I don't dependency is his only motive, it may not even be a motive of itself. I think he wants to control the situation. Handpicking a leader gives him a different sort of control than if he were leader himself, in some ways. He doesn't have the people looking to him as the leader, which frees him up to do his own stuff. He was able to make sure the people gravitated toward someone competent and fair. And if/when he doesn't want Jack in charge any longer? Well since it is likely people, being what they are, will rebel, it's now set so that they'll do so against Jack. Meanwhile, Locke is sitting pretty as exotic survivalist, who comes through in a pinch, feeds them, etc.
I don't think Locke's motivation is making people dependent on him. I think he's paternalistic, and wants to help people, even if they don't really need his kind of help. He is, indeed, manipulative, but Sayid didn't have to take the knife; Charlie didn't have to give him the smack; Jack didn't have to listen; Michael didn't have to let Walt believe that he found Vincent (and isn't it possible that having done that is his real problem with Locke?). He gives them what he believes they need, and they take it because they believe it too. Until he tied up Boone, who had pretty much given himself over to Locke already, he hadn't forced anyone. He may not consider what he did to Boone force, since he just provided the tools (crazy!paste, knife and rope).
Yeah, a little x-posty there.
Hee. The funny is, I was replying to the 'doomed' comment. Your post was just serendipity.
If they all wake up in their beds the next morning I am going to be really angry.