Anonymous wrote:OP’s other troll thread didn’t get any traction so she’s back at it 🙏
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no such thing as a JD in patent/IP law from Harvard.
Weird. They must have just gotten rid of their Law, Science, and Technology Program as well as all associated coursework and specialization on both Intellectual Property Law and Patent Law.
https://hls.harvard.edu/dept/academics/programs-of-study/law-science-and-technology/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no JD IP fellowship jointly with Harvard and MIT. You are just a liar posting nonsense on a mommy board.
Sorry, counselor, the jury has already returned its verdict. Your client is guilty of being a dimwit. Probably should have gone with an expert and not tried to defend yourself on this one. Next time, bring forth some actual evidence to substantiate your fraudulent claims and allegations.
This is embarrassing for you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no JD IP fellowship jointly with Harvard and MIT. You are just a liar posting nonsense on a mommy board.
Sorry, counselor, the jury has already returned its verdict. Your client is guilty of being a dimwit. Probably should have gone with an expert and not tried to defend yourself on this one. Next time, bring forth some actual evidence to substantiate your fraudulent claims and allegations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no JD IP fellowship jointly with Harvard and MIT. You are just a liar posting nonsense on a mommy board.
Hope you’re not dumb enough to think that every joint fellowship is part of some well advertised and published curriculum. These are invitation-only academic clubs and they don’t offer monthly payment plans or initiation fee discounting to people of limited intellectual acumen. Don’t feel bad that you’re not in the know. Ignorance is bliss, as your post so eloquently demonstrates of yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no JD IP fellowship jointly with Harvard and MIT. You are just a liar posting nonsense on a mommy board.
Hope you’re not dumb enough to think that every joint fellowship is part of some well advertised and published curriculum. These are invitation-only academic clubs and they don’t offer monthly payment plans or initiation fee discounting to people of limited intellectual acumen. Don’t feel bad that you’re not in the know. Ignorance is bliss, as your post so eloquently demonstrates of yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are not a mechanical engineer, and have no such specialization. Your terminology is glaringly lacking from an engineering perspective. The Germans lost engineering preeminence after WW2. As it relates to BMW, case in point: VANOS. Where the conceptual could never square with the real world.
-a German engineer
Nice try, troll. B.S. and M.S. degrees in mechanical engineering from Georgia Tech. Ph.D in Engineering Mathematics from MIT. J.D. in patent and intellectual property law from Harvard. Perhaps it is only benighted engineers like you that have never known the gratification of studying and innovating amongst the world’s most engineering elite.
This is probably how much you know about BMW innovation and engineering, in general: cos(ln(i^i))
Is the engineering math PhD program from the math dept or an engineering dept? If engineering, which course? Honestly never heard of this before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You are not a mechanical engineer, and have no such specialization. Your terminology is glaringly lacking from an engineering perspective. The Germans lost engineering preeminence after WW2. As it relates to BMW, case in point: VANOS. Where the conceptual could never square with the real world.
-a German engineer
Nice try, troll. B.S. and M.S. degrees in mechanical engineering from Georgia Tech. Ph.D in Engineering Mathematics from MIT. J.D. in patent and intellectual property law from Harvard. Perhaps it is only benighted engineers like you that have never known the gratification of studying and innovating amongst the world’s most engineering elite.
This is probably how much you know about BMW innovation and engineering, in general: cos(ln(i^i))
Anonymous wrote:There is no JD IP fellowship jointly with Harvard and MIT. You are just a liar posting nonsense on a mommy board.
Anonymous wrote:There is no JD IP fellowship jointly with Harvard and MIT. You are just a liar posting nonsense on a mommy board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That’s not how this works. At all.
There are no fellowships with a JD. You just are making more $hit up. You go to Harvard, do your standard 1L classes that are the same everywhere. Pick a few clssses the rest of your time there. Do fly out week for summer jobs. The end. No grades even anymore. Done. Get your JD. No BA fellowships. No specializing. Just a JD. Move on and get a job.
Well, let’s see, who should we believe more: an anonymous troll on DCUM or Harvard University’s official website?
https://hls.harvard.edu/opportunity-to-apply-for-2022-2023-john-m-olin-fellowships-in-empirical-law-and-finance/
Oh, you must be right. No fellowships with a JD! This entire application and the countless others like it must be Fake News.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Absolutely either a troll or Jerky McJerkface.
We paid cash for our house, our newest car is a 9 year old Subaru, and our furniture is mostly from Craigslist. What are we? 🤪
Frugal. Unless your house is worth $750K+. In which case, you're living beyond your means, as you can't afford vehicles and furniture commensurate with the caliber of your home. Original assertion proved. Case closed.
Anonymous wrote:That’s not how this works. At all.
There are no fellowships with a JD. You just are making more $hit up. You go to Harvard, do your standard 1L classes that are the same everywhere. Pick a few clssses the rest of your time there. Do fly out week for summer jobs. The end. No grades even anymore. Done. Get your JD. No BA fellowships. No specializing. Just a JD. Move on and get a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had actually attended, you would know you just get a JD.
But since you are just crap up on a mommy message board, you are confused.
I am amazed at how many people on this thread are projecting opinions well beyond their conversational and intellectual depth. Every intelligent person knows that a J.D. from Harvard is awarded as just that. Anyone that actually attended Harvard also understands the importance of and ability to specialize in a particular field through combinations of coursework and fellowship. These facts most likely escape the typical D.C. Big Law simpletons that attended the more remedial schools like UVA and Georgetown. Never could such sophomoric practitioners grasp the possibility of pursuing a joint fellowship opportunity simultaneously with both Harvard and MIT, to culminate in the awarding of both a J.D. and a Ph.D…obviously as a customized pathway to a C-Suite General Counsel position in Big Tech – as DCUM might comprehend it – with, of course, a specialization in patent and intellectual property law.
That’s not how this works. At all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you had actually attended, you would know you just get a JD.
But since you are just crap up on a mommy message board, you are confused.
I am amazed at how many people on this thread are projecting opinions well beyond their conversational and intellectual depth. Every intelligent person knows that a J.D. from Harvard is awarded as just that. Anyone that actually attended Harvard also understands the importance of and ability to specialize in a particular field through combinations of coursework and fellowship. These facts most likely escape the typical D.C. Big Law simpletons that attended the more remedial schools like UVA and Georgetown. Never could such sophomoric practitioners grasp the possibility of pursuing a joint fellowship opportunity simultaneously with both Harvard and MIT, to culminate in the awarding of both a J.D. and a Ph.D…obviously as a customized pathway to a C-Suite General Counsel position in Big Tech – as DCUM might comprehend it – with, of course, a specialization in patent and intellectual property law.