Duane “Dog” Chapman and vigilantism
Friday, August 24th, 2007How involved should citizens be in law enforcement? Old school Europe doesn’t believe that all problems should be mediated by society. Sometimes, it is just too personal.
Citizen Bounty hunter Duane “Dog” Chapman joined me today to chat about his new book You Can Run. But You Can’t Hide today on Maritime Morning. He’s also in Halifax on a speaking engagement.
Manure makes great fertilizer and, in the early life of Dog Chapman, there was a lot of it. Call it character fuel, maybe a bit too much: an abusive father, and a hard scrabble upbringing turned Dog from crime and time to transformation and peace of mind – no mean feat. Most who have gone through that kind of upbringing don’t make it out of their past, even if they can see it and smell it, mainly because they feel that they don’t deserve success.
As a character, and as a media figure folk hero, there is a strong cord that is being touched upon here with the public. But what it speaks to is less comic book hero/wrestler theatrics meets Good Samaritan, than it does a promotion of the fantasy of citizens taking the law into their own hands against the muddied moral clarity of bureaucracies and legal systems.
As someone who was involved in taking he law into their own hands when a close friend was raped in 1985, I understand this mentality, and I am torn regarding aspects of condemning it.
If everyone took the law into their own hands there would be anarchy. But is it realistic to say that Old Testament notions of vengeance are irrelevant? While Dog Chapman is only a facilitator of the legal system rather than its’ substitute, he still plays in the broader notion of the action-man in the name of justice.
If your son or daughter were raped would you really be happy with how the system would look after it? Some people cannot bite their lip that long.
My guess is, if someone messed with Dog’s family he would hunt him down, like all the criminals on his TV show, and look after business.
He would then turn himself in and do his time. But is that justice?
What was that Old Testament for anyway?