I will admit that when I first submitted the app, that the whole moral qualms completely escaped my mind, despite it being something that is integral to how Boyd is defined as a character. I apologize for the confusion I have created in trying to fix it, as it was not my intention.
Throughout most of the first season and a good chunk of the second season we see Boyd try to live a lifestyle on the right side of the law, and try to shy away from the criminal past he grew up in, showing that he at least has a sense of right and wrong, no matter how twisted it can be.
The best example of that is the Mine Heist he helps pull off in season two: Boyd tries his best to resist the temptation of falling back into a well-known routine (that is, robbing and blowing shit up), but is ultimately strong-armed into helping rob the company he works for at the suggestion he'll be a hero and not get caught.
Likewise, Boyd tends to live by some sort of pseudo-moral code, which he expects others to follow. The best examples I can think of are:
- Being angry at Raylan for not keeping a promise to give Dickie Bennett back to him, as he wanted to exact his revenge on the man who almost killed his girlfriend, and eventually punching the good Marshal in the face.
- Bringing his men to attack an old white supremacist buddy of his for breaking a promise to ensure his fiancee had protection while she was in prison, and promising to bring the pain back to him hundredfold should anything else happen to her.
As for the slavery bit: There are specific things going on that make Boyd go against his father's operation in Crestwood, specifically regarding the mistreatment of slaves. Because this information would spoil a part of Carley's ongoing crestwood plot, and would unravel the months of hard work she's put into it, I will be pm'ing you this information.
Re: QUESTIONS
Throughout most of the first season and a good chunk of the second season we see Boyd try to live a lifestyle on the right side of the law, and try to shy away from the criminal past he grew up in, showing that he at least has a sense of right and wrong, no matter how twisted it can be.
The best example of that is the Mine Heist he helps pull off in season two: Boyd tries his best to resist the temptation of falling back into a well-known routine (that is, robbing and blowing shit up), but is ultimately strong-armed into helping rob the company he works for at the suggestion he'll be a hero and not get caught.
Likewise, Boyd tends to live by some sort of pseudo-moral code, which he expects others to follow. The best examples I can think of are:
- Being angry at Raylan for not keeping a promise to give Dickie Bennett back to him, as he wanted to exact his revenge on the man who almost killed his girlfriend, and eventually punching the good Marshal in the face.
- Bringing his men to attack an old white supremacist buddy of his for breaking a promise to ensure his fiancee had protection while she was in prison, and promising to bring the pain back to him hundredfold should anything else happen to her.
As for the slavery bit: There are specific things going on that make Boyd go against his father's operation in Crestwood, specifically regarding the mistreatment of slaves. Because this information would spoil a part of Carley's ongoing crestwood plot, and would unravel the months of hard work she's put into it, I will be pm'ing you this information.