Ultimately, it's what the show is about: the conflict between SHIELD and Hydra. Complaining about that is like complaining that Harry Potter keeps using the Death Eaters.
seems like an excuse for poor writing and a lack of imagination to me. There are more villains than Hydra in the Marvel universe that SHIELD has gone up against. At this point, it's drawn out, boring, and we're stuck with piss poor acting from #1 bad guy Ward. Enough already...
I'm still interested. I've always felt that the show has yet to dig deep enough into Hydra's ideology to really understand what motivates Hydra's people, why they believe in what they believe in. I may not like the idea of Hydra-as-ancient-conspiracy, but giving them something they believe in beyond "world domination" does a lot to give Hydra a greater sense of psychological reality. So I don't think it was time to move on from Hydra yet, and I'm glad they've kept Hydra around.
Yeah, as I said last week this is probably the least interesting option they could have gone with, but it's not massively improbable.
Not sure how this new bit of information speaks to why the people in Hydra do what they do since it's apparently a very well kept secret, reserved only for the higher levels.
With that in mind I get the sense that Malick is unusual in that he's a modern day Hydra "head" who's also a true believer, whereas the likes of List, Reinhardt/Whitehall, Zola and von Strucker senior were mostly in it for more pragmatic reasons.
Up until this point I never felt that Hydra's obsession for world domination needed to be justified.
I pretty much take it as read that people who want power and control generally do so because they want to change the world. Usually operating from a belief that the current state of affairs is unacceptable and/or the current decision makers and event shapers are either corrupt, incompetent, philosophically wrong headed or lacking a vital trait (i.e. not being the person who wants them gone.)
It's the same basic drive that propels most politicians. The money, greed and corruption generally come later and in fairly short order. It turns reformists into conservative yes-men, freedom fighters into terrorists and idealists into criminal gangs.