[ John has to think on this for a while. It doesn't sound quite right to him though he can't put his finger on why. He takes a long time to respond. He could have just walked away to do something else but instead he was thinking about what Accelerator said. He only replies (almost an hour later) when he's confident about it. ]
No, he expects people to do the best thing when confronted with it.
[ And he is disappointed, often, by the people they encounter. But his persistence in his belief that people can do good is part of what makes him Harold Finch. It's part of what makes him so special. It's one of the reasons why John follows him unerringly. John would never ask or want him to change that; he'll just do everything in his power to protect him when things go wrong. ]
[His text goes for long enough without a response that Accelerator actually assumes John is just leaving him on read. Which is fine, whatever, he doesn't take it personally. He's being kind of a jerk about Harold, and he's fully aware that John cares a lot about Harold, so it wouldn't be weird for him to do that.
So he's surprised to see a text come in. He almost isn't sure if he should respond to that himself. He knows he isn't going to change John's mind, he isn't looking to do that. He just keeps thinking about how Harold expects the world from people (people like himself) and how people (people like himself) can never live up to insane expectations like that, because people (people like himself), more often than not, are at best shitty and at worst complete monsters.
After a few minutes, he settles on something.]
Expecting someone to do the best thing is fucking unrealistic.
[ John doesn't disagree. Harold has a lot of unrealistic expectations for what people will do. He just wouldn't want Harold to be any other way. And yet... and yet sometimes it works. Sometimes it works. Sometimes there are people like John who rise to the occasion, who think they'll do something terrible and walk back from that edge instead. He remembers Jennings, Benton, people who he would have put in the ground before and not lost much sleep, but at the last second, especially with Jennings, he stopped. He didn't do that. He chose another path. Even though Harold expected him to kill Jennings he didn't, and he didn't because Harold had asked him to be a different person and John had realized that he could do it. Without Harold's belief he never would have found his way back. ]
no subject
No, he expects people to do the best thing when confronted with it.
[ And he is disappointed, often, by the people they encounter. But his persistence in his belief that people can do good is part of what makes him Harold Finch. It's part of what makes him so special. It's one of the reasons why John follows him unerringly. John would never ask or want him to change that; he'll just do everything in his power to protect him when things go wrong. ]
no subject
So he's surprised to see a text come in. He almost isn't sure if he should respond to that himself. He knows he isn't going to change John's mind, he isn't looking to do that. He just keeps thinking about how Harold expects the world from people (people like himself) and how people (people like himself) can never live up to insane expectations like that, because people (people like himself), more often than not, are at best shitty and at worst complete monsters.
After a few minutes, he settles on something.]
Expecting someone to do the best thing is fucking unrealistic.
no subject
Sometimes people prove him right.