Board Thread:WARNING ALL USERS False Info\Spoilers/@comment-16047999-20140107140433/@comment-19765459-20140110184814

BoricuaWolf wrote: No, Scott said it would was ok for Isaac to be Allison's anchor. He didn't say anything about them dating. He assigned Isaac to keep an eye on her (as in protect her). In both instances there was clearly something still between Scott and Allison. Allison even felt uncomfortable with Isaac being her anchor, which is why she hesitated and Scott even had to say it was ok in the first place. Neither one of those should have been interpreted by Isaac as a green light to go ahead and date her. Scott never said that was ok. I think this is proven by the fact that he keeps slamming Isaac into walls. I’m sure once his relationship starts to develop with Kira (who I like better than Allison anyway), he’ll come to terms with Isaac and Allison, but at this point I think Isaac is simply in the wrong.

No, she hesitated because she knew that this was putting it out in the open that there were feelings between her and Isaac (he could not have served as her anchor otherwise, that was made explicitly clear by Deaton).

Regardless of lingering feelings between them, it is not Scott's right to decide who Allison can or cannot have a relationship with! The Bro Code is actually insanely chauvinistic in that regard, because it assumes that the girl is a mindless possession. Isaac did not set out to pursue a relationship with Allison, but Scott kept throwing them together under dangerous circumstances and low and behold there was a spark!

However, in order to invoke the Bro Code, you do not send the bro in question to play bodyguard with the girl and expect that nothing will happen. You either expect said bro to stay away from your ex, or else you specifically tell him to avoid her. Scott did the exact opposite. This is yet another case of Scott not accepting the consequences of his choices.

Kind of like when Scott refused to allow Jackson to be killed, and Jackson subsequently slaughtered a fair chunk of the Beacon Hills Police Department, which technically makes Scott an accessory to murder. This is less about Bro Code violations than the fact that Scott never thinks about anything beyond the immediate, and he thinks about other people a lot less than he pretends to.