Tommy,
Based on your opening post, I get the impression that you are not familiar with the game of golf. I have been watching golfers for more than 50 years and it is very clear people can't hit the ball straight and probably never will.
To suggest we overemphasize width is silly.
Tim, I have been watching golfers for more than 60 years and agree that many hit it crooked, but that doesn't mean there shots should not be penalized. On the site we extol the virtues of great golf courses, yet we want fairways so wide you can't miss them. Hit it crooked at Pine Valley, Royal County Down, Merion or most the the top rated course and you have a severe penalty. It is interesting that Tom mentions Sebonack. I thought it was a wonderfully fun course when I played it, but that there was too much room off the tee while the shots into the greens were more demanding. I realize that a lot of folks don't practice and play for social reasons. Why should they dictate conditions for everyone? I'm sorry. Take a lesson and hit the practice tee.
Tommy,
You cite two of the most difficult courses in the world as examples -RCD and PV.
Can you imagine playing at 12 noon at a busy public course or resort prepared like PV or RCD?
If golf courses were playable for those who play for "social reasons or don't practice" (the majority I would say by a mile) wouldn't the best players still be the best players?-and couldn't they separate themselves by driving it longer and to preferred positions?
Why torture the vast majority of players so a very elite few can measure their johnson's?(or more importantly measure poorer player's johnsons by building a course that only they can navigate)
Tommy you mention Sebonack and difficulty on approaches.
Once I played Sebonack a few times and figured out where best to drive it for certain holes and certain pins (and actually executed) I found those same approaches infinitely easier with the repelling sideboards becoming accepting sideboards and backboards and the proper angles achieved by experience and execution allowing me to create much easier approaches than the guy hitting it down the exact middle.
I think Tom is wrong about Sebonack-evaluating a course/driving area /setup by where the straightest(and not very long) hitters in the world hit it is a recipe for ruining a great fun course with different challenges, and replacing it with a more homogonized "hit it here" strategy, while torturing the members it was built for.
and for the record, the biggest complaint that I got from the members about the Ladies Open setup at Sebonack was that during the runup to the Open the fescue was too tall and the rough unplayable for the membership-from pretty good male players.