It is unknown if the writers intended to choose this location on purpose.
If the writer intended his journals to be private, who are we to be reading them?
Nevertheless, the episode took on greater relevance to actual, international events than the writers had intended.
So we understand the first "have" to mean that women are still targeted - which in this instance probably isn't the meaning the writer intends.
What the writer intends to express in his/her work.
This marks a change in his character that the writers intended to affect Adama for the rest of the second season.
Now the first question to consider is whether the biblical writers intended their words to be taken as history or as myth.
Despite the comparisons and similarities to Lost, the writers intend them to be very different shows.
Perhaps the writer intends to show off his technical "skills," but it is only a distraction.
Hasn't it been changed over the years to say different things from what the original writers intended?