Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why has this ridiculous thread been resurrected?
Sorry, lawyers, you will never change the public's mind on this. There is absolutely never a situation where a lawyer outranks a doctor. Not one.
Not so. Being a prosecutor is a lot more intellectually demanding than being a family medicine doc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a former BigLaw lawyer, from a top ranked law school. My good friend is an ER doctor, from a middle-ranked school.
I am blown out with respect for her. She actually can make a real difference--a life and death difference, and does all the time.
I'm almost 50 and so are many of my friends, so a common theme is: "I am entering into the second half of my life. I want to leave the planet a better place. (Besides raising good kids) What can I do to make difference?"
My doctor friend does not have to mull over this one.
I vote doctor.
You mean she is great at consults? ER docs don't deal with life and death. They exist to turf patients.
Hey hey now this is getting personal! Don't tell me an ER doc doesn't deal with life and death until you'be manually pumped someone's heart (as in with your own hands) as a desperate last measure to save their life.
LOL as if ER docs ever do that in their careers. Maybe 1 in 100 of them? And ER thoracotomies are hack jobs with poor outcomes done by Cowboys - don't step into the ring unless your ready to play.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. My argument is as follows-
JD is more intellectual than MD
JD has much higher salary potential
JD is much more versatile - the prestige speaks for itself in many industries
JD ceiling is higher - Supreme Court justices have no medical counterpart near as prestigious
JDs in big law get car service, catered lunches, and suits - MDs have cabs/trains, cafeteria, and scrubs
JDs are sole in their ability to practice law - MDs have DO and foreign competition
JDs charge by hour - MDs have to deal with government dictated reimbursements
How are docs more prestigious?
Anonymous wrote:Physician, no question.
Lawyers make more money and have better career options but prestige doesn't hinge entirely on those. A big part of prestige is the respect your profession commands, and the life-or-death quality of advice you get from these professionals. People care about their health more than about anything else in the world, and especially about the health of their children. Plus medical education is very far above the intellectual potential of most people, so people look up to doctors as the holders of privileged information. Law is tricky but I don't think most people consider themselves unable to understand it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What lawyers fail to understand--repeatedly--is that most people consider them leeches (or cockroaches--pick your metaphor).
I grant my trash collector more prestige than I do pretty much any lawyer. At least he's doing an honest job for a fair wage.
What about when you get in a car accident or your ex is being difficult in a divorce case, or you have some other reason you need a lawyer. Yes plenty of lawywers are leeches but we live in a society where even your own mother will screw you over.
Being a doctor is prestigious but our medical system is a mess. One of the top debts people have are medical bills so some might consider doctors to be leeches also especially when you look at how some procedures and services are seriously being over charged.
The way I understand it doctors are not setting the rates for medical care, it's hospitals, insurance companies and the medical industry as a whole. The reason that aspirin in the E.R. costs $100 is because it helps offset the cost for the next 100 patients with no insurance that walk into the E.R. and get free services, surgeries, care and medication. That plus the large of amount of insurance they have to have to cover liabilities in this culture where legal cases are so prevalent.
This thread is ridiculous, lawyers if it strokes your ego a bit- thank you for your tenacity at always wanting to get in the last word, even if that means bumping an old thread to do so.
Anonymous wrote:
What lawyers fail to understand--repeatedly--is that most people consider them leeches (or cockroaches--pick your metaphor).
I grant my trash collector more prestige than I do pretty much any lawyer. At least he's doing an honest job for a fair wage.
What about when you get in a car accident or your ex is being difficult in a divorce case, or you have some other reason you need a lawyer. Yes plenty of lawywers are leeches but we live in a society where even your own mother will screw you over.
Being a doctor is prestigious but our medical system is a mess. One of the top debts people have are medical bills so some might consider doctors to be leeches also especially when you look at how some procedures and services are seriously being over charged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What lawyers fail to understand--repeatedly--is that most people consider them leeches (or cockroaches--pick your metaphor).
I grant my trash collector more prestige than I do pretty much any lawyer. At least he's doing an honest job for a fair wage.
What about when you get in a car accident or your ex is being difficult in a divorce case, or you have some other reason you need a lawyer. Yes plenty of lawywers are leeches but we live in a society where even your own mother will screw you over.
Being a doctor is prestigious but our medical system is a mess. One of the top debts people have are medical bills so some might consider doctors to be leeches also especially when you look at how some procedures and services are seriously being over charged.
Anonymous wrote:What lawyers fail to understand--repeatedly--is that most people consider them leeches (or cockroaches--pick your metaphor).
I grant my trash collector more prestige than I do pretty much any lawyer. At least he's doing an honest job for a fair wage.