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Thursday, May 28, 2026

Caleb Anderson: The psychopathology of the left and the slow death of decency


Recent controversy around disparaging comments about Nicola Willis made by a prominent member of the labour caucus at a closed-door workshop give pause for thought. The response by the Labour leader, when asked to explain, was simply that he had reminded his caucus to be cautious with their words as they could become public.

Basically, he was saying, be careful when you are near a microphone.

This response suggests that such comments, and the mindsets that gave rise to such comments, are acceptable, as long as they are not heard, as long as they are in-house.

We all make mistakes, there are words we wish we could take back, there are too many moments when we fall short. But what we say says something about who we are, about what we think is important, about what we believe, about how we deal with those with whom we disagree, about how we deal with the business of life.

The absence of any genuine contrition, and the metaphorical backslapping that appeared to be going on in the background at the said workshop, says something about the mindset of the Labour Party, and perhaps about politics more generally, especially, it seems, of the political left.

This is all the Maori Party have ever known, this is their target market, but the Labour Party, and even the Greens, were not always like this.

I grew up in the seventies, and I remember a time when restraint was, generally (although admittedly not always) considered a virtue. I recall a time, even in the political sphere (with some notable exceptions), when people were more cautious with their words, less personal. Perhaps the media were less probing, less interested in side issues. By and large, there were a good number of people committed to exercising some restraint, to doing what was decent, because reputation depended on this, and reputation, not so much tribal affiliation, mattered.

I am not being naive here. I well know that what we say is often not what we think, that sometimes we feel genuine, and oftentimes justifiable, indignance at the hypocrisy of others, or even of ourselves on reflection, that there are times for a deep breath, and that there are often things we would like to call back.

But the political left, globally, seem to think their cause is sufficiently, and singularly, so exalted, so pre-eminently true, that it provides a warrant to repeatedly push the boundaries of discourse, truth, and decency, and to define these to suit.

This has all become common currency.

There is no middle ground, there is my worldview and there is yours, and only an impenetrable deafness in the space in-between.

Righteous indignation has become the go to for the left, the justification for excess, the grounds for irrational and nonsensical arguments, and the licence to treat those who see things differently as enemies, and their words as hate speech. This is increasingly making the left immune to reason, to the value of contrary argument, to the boundaries of civil, rational and collaborative discourse.

There is an ontological case for being decent, for listening respectfully, for acknowledging there is more that we do not know, than what we know, that there is much to learn from those who have come before us, that things are not always what we believe (or wish) them to be, that absolutes are poison ... and that, while truth may be difficult to nail, it is something worth patiently (and open-mindedly) pursuing nevertheless.

The reluctance of the media to call the left out, the preoccupying tribal affiliations operating across the left, and the sugar hits from the hyperbolic and performative politics we have become accustomed to, polarises beyond the body politic, and deprives substantive issues of the oxygen, and the thoughtful critiquing, they deserve.

It is hard not to see the working out of deeper stuff here, of inner struggles spilling into the public domain, of the unfettered projection of negative emotion, of unreconciled complexes, of naked ambition, of scores to be settled, of enemies within becoming enemies without, and of the desperate need to be right, in the fear that one could be wrong ... and of failing to face one's own collective demons, over laying them a someone else's door.

The political left has become a lightning rod for our baser propensities. For as long as they are in denial of this, they remain unfit to govern.

Caleb Anderson, a graduate history, economics, psychotherapy and theology, has been an educator for over thirty years, twenty as a school principal.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Call the left out? It’s obviously not a left / right thing. You’ve seen the words Nash went to for describing women. It’s a rich/poor problem mate, and you’ve been had.

Anonymous said...

Caleb, couldn't agree more. The left ideological theorists are becoming far more radical. However, their so called logic is feeble and non existent. I actually challenge them now and despite highlighting their stupidity and getting them to agree by showing them actual facts, they are married to their position.

The radical left refuse to act in their own best interests. This increases the danger as even more stupid people start to see this poor behavior and then lower the bar further. Now the radical ideological theorists have to defend the dangerous radical behavior as it plays out.
Im unsure if they are just too weak to stand up for themselves and call it out or if they are truly sick people. The left attracts lifes dregs and losers.

Anonymous said...

Bullshit!
Disparaging your opponent with words of a personal nature is a tactic as old as politics. Right and left.Many would say it defines politics.
Cartoonists have made their living doing exactly that.
I am far from a defender of the disgrace that is the "left wing" but calling them out for doing so and pretending that they are doing something unique or original is far worse.
That is pure lying!

Anonymous said...

This behaviour is not exclusive to but very prominent in the sisterhood of the left. They are not politicians, but simply activists who revert to childish, cruel and heartless verbal when they disagree with anyone opposed to their ideological madness. Their true colours are gradually being revealed as sensible people and the alternative media push back.

Anonymous said...

Wellat least labour has announced a policy identifying horses and ducks...part of identity politics. But they would benefit from watching the Monty Python sketch Training School for Village Idiots. Abuse is not just a Left thing. MSM cartoonists here do it to applause from fellow travellers. Muldoon turned abuse to his advantage well.

Anonymous said...

You’d think that someone who worked in education as the profile mentions would know the bigger picture and not put out something so misleading. But here we are.

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Elaborate on the 'misleading', Anon 1014!

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