Anonymous wrote:law is interesting to study. The practice of law is tedious and grueling.
Anonymous wrote:Who goes on to do trial work in the state and county systems, where the rubber hits the road so to speak?
Anonymous wrote:I think law is an excellent field of study. I went to law school because I loved studying the law. I went to state schools both for undergrad and law school and had no debt. I would advise more people to do it that way. A legal degree is helpful in a number of fields. I work in lobbying. When I got into lobbying, most foks (especially women) had law degrees. I can't think of anything I would have loved more studying.
Anonymous wrote:law is interesting to study. The practice of law is tedious and grueling.
Anonymous wrote:Why not fully fund our public defender offices? Our prosecutors are fully funded? I have a friend who is a Federal public defender who basically has to take off one day a week due to the sequester, but the Federal prosecutor does not. What happends when the mandated LWOP day falls on a court date? Your client is deprived of their consitutional right to a defense? Or better yet - I have heard this - the Gov't pays a private firms $125 an hour to do the work its own public defender would be doing b/c it doesn't have the money to pay him. I swear to God we have got to have the stupidist Government around.
Anonymous wrote:So, who is working to make sure our justice system actually is fair to all?
Anonymous wrote:
I graduated from GW, got a clerkship and then big law job, paid off all debt, built up retirement and savings, made big law partner, had 3 kids along the way, quit and now SAH. Life couldn't be better. So my experience differs from pp's.