On the bottom of page two of This paper, the authors remark the following:
'...by translation invariance and ergodicity, we know that existence of a bigeodesic is a $0−1$ event and hence it follows that if almost surely bigeodesics exist, then with positive probability there must exist bigeodesics passing through the origin.
I have a few questions about this remark.
(A) In a last passage percolation, we always have trivial bigeodesics (horizontal and vertical lines) and therefore it follows that the existence of a bigeodesic is an almost sure event. Am I missing something here? Or the above remark is for the existence of a non-trivial bigeodesic?
(B) What do they mean by 'translation invariance and ergodicity'? I mean what exactly is the argument here?
(C) It intuitively seems reasonable to believe that the existence of bigeodesic should not be affected by finitely many vertices. In other words, one should be able to say that the existence of a bigeodesic (or a non-trivial bigeodesic) is a $0$-$1$ event as one does in Kolmogorov's $0$-$1$ law. I tried it but could not make a proper argument.