Pay for the fire
Put out a fire and pay for it, a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji ù huॸt ó UX ī n, which means to throw firewood into the fire in order to put out the fire. It means that the wrong way can not solve the problem, on the contrary, it will make the problem more serious. It comes from "Deng Xizi · Wu Hou Pian".
Analysis of Idioms
Save the fire and pay for it
The origin of Idioms
In Deng Xizi's wuhhou chapter, "if you make trouble, you cheat the people; if you disturb the government, you will be uncertain. If you do not treat the root cause, you will be responsible for the end. For example, if you save the drowning hammer, you will be paid for the fire fighting."
Idiom usage
It is not right to refer to. example you're saving the fire by doing so. The more you help, the more you help!
Pay for the fire
The clouds are disturbing and breaking - yún rǎo fú liè
a pleasure which would cost one nothing - huì ér bù fèi