In this quotation, Chesterton writes against people who compare war to vigilante justice. But his argument is not that this is a poor comparison, but that instead the analogy doesn’t go far enough. So, he compounds the error of his opponents with an error of his own.
There’s also some scenario slippage—in the peacenik argument, the citizen “avenges” himself, but by the time Chesterton gets to him, the dead man was just “standing there within reach of the hatchet.” That alone gives you a hint about you what kind of hearing the accused is likely to get in Chesterton’s court.
Two WAITWs don’t make a right.
In this quotation, Chesterton writes against people who compare war to vigilante justice. But his argument is not that this is a poor comparison, but that instead the analogy doesn’t go far enough. So, he compounds the error of his opponents with an error of his own.
There’s also some scenario slippage—in the peacenik argument, the citizen “avenges” himself, but by the time Chesterton gets to him, the dead man was just “standing there within reach of the hatchet.” That alone gives you a hint about you what kind of hearing the accused is likely to get in Chesterton’s court.