The world we live in today sometimes baffles me. Everything is different shades of gray. Honor and fidelity seem to be out of fashion. People are entitled. The media are advocates, not reporters.
While the Code of the West was unwritten and existed in various forms, there were certain common elements everyone—from the hard-working sodbuster, to the law-abiding citizen, to the hardened criminal—typically abided by. Granted, there were exceptions, but generally that held true.
The Code gave westerners a guide to live by that they broke at their own peril. Are there still things today that aren’t for sale? I’d wager we all have values that are non-negotiable. After all, values don’t really change—only times, circumstances, and people do.
The good news is that the values the Code embodied haven’t vanished from today’s America, but more often than not they’ve been marginalized. Popular culture tends to look down on old-time values, or should I say the timeless values of nineteenth century America. We’re an instant gratification society that focuses on the here and now, and disregards the lessons of the past. Imagine a world where a man’s word—and a woman’s—was their bond. Where handshakes took the place of fifty-page contracts and lawyers.
So, yes, occasionally I yearn for those simpler times amid today’s hustle and bustle. Sometimes, the world I created in A Score to Settle looks pretty appealing. And it might to you. American westerns serve to remind us of our solid roots and what we were and could become again. That’s why I write them and why they’ll never die.