Voters and even recovering (?) alcoholic Dog the Bounty Hunter enable. It just keeps the addict going.
Enablers of the month:
56% of the constituents of Anthony Weiner’s 9th New York Congressional District, who said they would have re-elected him despite what at the time seemed pretty good evidence that he sent sexually explicit messages and photos to at least six women who were not his wife and putting himself into a position in which he could easily be blackmailed and, therefore, corrupted. My hunch is after his resignation, a large plurality if not majority still would vote for his re-election. Consider the former mayor of Washington, DC, Marion Barry, who was elected to a fourth term after being convicted of cocaine possession (and there’s much more on Barry at Wikipedia, which is a classic case of a highly successful poly-drug addict gaming the political system).
Many French citizens, who claim the accusation of attempted rape of a hotel maid by International Monetary Fund head and would-be French president Dominique Strauss-Kahn is none of the public’s business. He’s a public official; therefore, his private life is the public’s business insofar as he engages in criminal activity, is accused of doing so, or does anything for which he could potentially be blackmailed.
Duane “Dog the Bounty Hunter” Chapman, who posted $11,000 bail for actor Nicolas Cage after a “heavily intoxicated” Cage was arrested in the French Quarter in New Orleans (where you have to engage in some pretty outlandish behaviors to get arrested). Cage and his wife were arguing over where their rental home was located (imagine that!). After pulling her by the arm and striking a number of vehicles (apparently with his fist), Cage was arrested on charges of domestic battery, disturbing the peace and public drunkenness. Chapman claimed he rescued Cage because he is a huge fan. Duane, you idiot. As a recovering addict you should know that if you want to help him you need to stop “helping.”