EPISODE · Apr 16, 2026 · 5 MIN
Steven Barrett - Why Being a Criminal Barrister is DISGUSTING
from The Daily Heretic · host Andrew Gold
👉 SUBSCRIBE to Heretics Clips for the most intense moments from the Heretics podcast — new debates and conversations every week: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos In this powerful and unsettling exchange, barrister Steven Barrett explains why working as a criminal defence lawyer can feel “disgusting” — not because of contempt for the law, but because of the horrific human realities lawyers are required to confront daily. Andrew Gold presses him on what that actually means, what kinds of cases push people to their limits, and how repeatedly dealing with violence, abuse, and injustice reshapes those tasked with defending the legal system. Watch the full episode here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oq3npc3d8ys&t=18s Barrett describes how criminal barristers are exposed, day after day, to the darkest parts of human behaviour — and how the system often demands emotional detachment in situations where that detachment feels unnatural. He talks about the psychological toll of hearing graphic evidence, defending deeply troubling individuals, and operating inside a system that is meant to be fair but often feels morally conflicted. Andrew challenges him on whether that emotional cost is unavoidable, whether the system could be designed differently, and how barristers protect their own mental health while doing work most people could not tolerate for a single day. The result is a raw discussion about justice, duty, emotional survival, and the price paid by those who operate inside the criminal courts. 🔥 Why this moment stands out: • It reveals what the public never sees about criminal law • It exposes the emotional cost behind legal professionalism • It raises uncomfortable questions about justice and human limits Is it possible to do this work without becoming hardened? Does emotional numbness protect lawyers — or slowly damage them? And what happens when the people meant to uphold justice are quietly worn down by it? This clip doesn’t attack the legal profession — it exposes its human cost. It shows how ideals of justice collide with trauma, how professionalism requires emotional suppression, and how that suppression leaves lasting marks. 💬 Watch closely. Think carefully. Decide for yourself. Subscribe to Heretics Clips and turn on notifications so you don’t miss future conversations like this. #Heretics #AndrewGold #StevenBarrett #CriminalJustice #LawPodcast #LegalDebate #MentalHealth #JusticeSystem #PodcastClip #DeepConversation Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
What this episode covers
👉 SUBSCRIBE to Heretics Clips for the most intense moments from the Heretics podcast — new debates and conversations every week: https://www.youtube.com/@hereticsclips/videos In this powerful and unsettling exchange, barrister Steven Barrett explains why working as a criminal defence lawyer can feel “disgusting” — not because of contempt for the law, but because of the horrific human realities lawyers are required to confront daily. Andrew Gold presses him on what that actually means, what kinds of cases push people to their limits, and how repeatedly dealing with violence, abuse, and injustice reshapes those tasked with defending the legal system. Watch the full episode here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oq3npc3d8ys&t=18s Barrett describes how criminal barristers are exposed, day after day, to the darkest parts of human behaviour — and how the system often demands emotional detachment in situations where that detachment feels unnatural. He talks about the psychological toll of hearing graphic evidence, defending deeply troubling individuals, and operating inside a system that is meant to be fair but often feels morally conflicted. Andrew challenges him on whether that emotional cost is unavoidable, whether the system could be designed differently, and how barristers protect their own mental health while doing work most people could not tolerate for a single day. The result is a raw discussion about justice, duty, emotional survival, and the price paid by those who operate inside the criminal courts. 🔥 Why this moment stands out: • It reveals what the public never sees about criminal law • It exposes the emotional cost behind legal professionalism • It raises uncomfortable questions about justice and human limits Is it possible to do this work without becoming hardened? Does emotional numbness protect lawyers — or slowly damage them? And what happens when the people meant to uphold justice are quietly worn down by it? This clip doesn’t attack the legal profession — it exposes its human cost. It shows how ideals of justice collide with trauma, how professionalism requires emotional suppression, and how that suppression leaves lasting marks. 💬 Watch closely. Think carefully. Decide for yourself. Subscribe to Heretics Clips and turn on notifications so you don’t miss future conversations like this. #Heretics #AndrewGold #StevenBarrett #CriminalJustice #LawPodcast #LegalDebate #MentalHealth #JusticeSystem #PodcastClip #DeepConversation Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Steven Barrett - Why Being a Criminal Barrister is DISGUSTING
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