Since yours seems to be broken you can use mine.sundance95 wrote:Yeah, that'd be cost effective.Sentry wrote: If it doesn't I'm sure we could find a reason to "liberate" some countries that we owe.

Since yours seems to be broken you can use mine.sundance95 wrote:Yeah, that'd be cost effective.Sentry wrote: If it doesn't I'm sure we could find a reason to "liberate" some countries that we owe.
Which would also require a constitutional amendmentResolutePear wrote:What we need to do is put Bill Clinton on the ballot and get him back in office.
Oh I was sarchasming with you, not at you. Check the batteries on that thing.Sentry wrote: Since yours seems to be broken you can use mine.
The will of the people prevails, buddy.whymeohgodno wrote:Which would also require a constitutional amendmentResolutePear wrote:What we need to do is put Bill Clinton on the ballot and get him back in office.
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Fucking sarcastics, how do they work?Sentry wrote:
I guess I need to make a few more calibrations.
Nightrunner wrote:mpasi wrote:
d. Your grain of salt is fair; I just think we could stand a little more of this pole of the perspective, to counterbalance the overwhelming lack of discussion among 0Ls about legal hiring.
It’s a far different world than it was in the 90’s. Clinton worked well with a republican congress that was just equally dedicated to a balanced budget. Instead of a Department of Homeland Security consuming money there was a “peace dividend” as a result of the end of the Cold War. And I think most importantly for 7 of the 8 years of the Clinton Presidency crude oil was under $20.00 per barrel. In February of 1999 crude averaged $9.30 a barrel.ResolutePear wrote:What we need to do is put Bill Clinton on the ballot and get him back in office.
You do pose good points.thequest wrote:It’s a far different world than it was in the 90’s. Clinton worked well with a republican congress that was just equally dedicated to a balanced budget. Instead of a Department of Homeland Security consuming money there was a “peace dividend” as a result of the end of the Cold War. And I think most importantly for 7 of the 8 years of the Clinton Presidency crude oil was under $20.00 per barrel. In February of 1999 crude averaged $9.30 a barrel.ResolutePear wrote:What we need to do is put Bill Clinton on the ballot and get him back in office.
I think that Bush and Obama are both horrible presidents but when crude oil imports account for over half of the trade deficit this economy is going to continue to hurt for a long time and I don’t believe Clinton would fare any better with $70.00 oil.
Last I checked, the stimulus was tapped upto 15%... we'll have several years till we see more tangibility.thequest wrote:I agree that outsourcing is painful at the moment and I don’t hear either side addressing this issue in any sort of meaningful intelligent manner. I’d also like to weigh in on stimulus spending. Bush’s idea of stimulus was just as ineffective as Obama’s. Bush borrowed billions from China to give everyone a $600.00 check and people went out and bought more junk they didn’t need that was made in China. The Chinese could then take those profits and lend them to Obama to use on his worthless spending. The worst part of the Obama stimulus up to this point is that there is so little to show for it, not only in terms of economic growth but also in tangible products. He’s finally proposing infrastructure upgrades but it’s probably too little and it’s certainly too late.
LOL, good luck with that.ResolutePear wrote: I'm going to email him and bitch.
Sent.thequest wrote:LOL, good luck with that.ResolutePear wrote: I'm going to email him and bitch.
Used my real name, vs. RP... but in hindsight, RP would of gotten more attention.Mr. President,
Are there, or will there, be any efforts to regulate the outsourcing of jobs from American companies or impose a VAT to make American workers economically "viable" for technology companies to hire within the country versus overseas?
Just seems that all of these companies are cutting the cake and eating it, too... and I'm sick of getting tech support from some guy half a world away from me.
Rooting for the Democrats in November,
ResolutePear
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Classygal87 wrote:I find this post exaggerated a little. Im sure some of the points are true and valid, but i don't think it should in any way discourage anyone from law school if they are in it for the right reasons.
If you love law and are passionate about it then law school is a great place for you.
Yes the job market is bad right now but it's bad all across the board people from
all disciplines are out of work. The successful people do what they have to in order to
survive and find a way to be where they want to be.
Complaining about your situation or warning others will not change it.
I know many successful lawyers that have not always worked at big firms,
and some that didn't go to a T-14 but they found a way to get to wherever they
wanted to be.
My point is go to law school because its what you want to do and where you want to be.
If you want a certain job or to work for a certain type of firm after graduation find a way to make it happen.
Maybe someone doesn't start off where they want because the market is so bad, but it's where you finish that counts.
This is just my opinion and how I view things.
Classygal87 wrote:I find this post exaggerated a little. Im sure some of the points are true and valid, but i don't think it should in any way discourage anyone from law school if they are in it for the right reasons.
If you love law and are passionate about it then law school is a great place for you.
Yes the job market is bad right now but it's bad all across the board people from
all disciplines are out of work. The successful people do what they have to in order to
survive and find a way to be where they want to be.
Complaining about your situation or warning others will not change it.
I know many successful lawyers that have not always worked at big firms,
and some that didn't go to a T-14 but they found a way to get to wherever they
wanted to be.
My point is go to law school because its what you want to do and where you want to be.
If you want a certain job or to work for a certain type of firm after graduation find a way to make it happen.
Maybe someone doesn't start off where they want because the market is so bad, but it's where you finish that counts.
This is just my opinion and how I view things.
blackwater88 wrote:
Where do I find this mythical Mid-Law? I thought it was nothing more than 0L wishful thinking.
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lol had it been most this would be a whole different discussion.whymeohgodno wrote:Many - at least 2?
lololol I hate the LSAT so much.
Communicate now with those who not only know what a legal education is, but can offer you worthy advice and commentary as you complete the three most educational, yet challenging years of your law related post graduate life.
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It is not about scaring people. It is about giving people a realistic look at their future career prospects. The glitz and glamour of a law degree combined with the false advertising put out by law schools vis a vis employment prospects are to an extent defrauding naive students and oversaturating the profession (however it is also to an extent the students' fault for their willingness to be so naive, the information is out there (e.g. TLS) if a student is willing to spend some time researching his future career plans). As for BigLaw most associates will work 60-70 hour weeks for an initial salary of $160,000, with Lockstep, that would like $50/hr starting out and going up $5/hr per year. Of course the real target would be the all important partnership, which can be worth millions.Elizabeth999 wrote: Nevertheless..it really isn't cool to scare people who are already scared enough trying to work their way through a very difficult venture. The skills and learning you gain from school will pay off....People who work in those firms making big $$ probably make minimum wage if you count the hundreds and thousands of hours they work....
And who is gonna pay us to do that (I am not even talking a lot of money here)? Seriously even the public service positions, like Public Citizen, have cutthroat competition as well as funding shortfalls. There are many worthwhile causes, but you gotta eat, who is gonna feed you?That being said, it is always good to look at the negative as well as the positives in any situation. Really, why don't you use that great law degree to hold some of our elected representative accountable for defrauding the American people. We Americans tend to be quite self serving but if we all don't get our heads out of the sand soon...well, the situation will be bleaker than not getting a top job in some soulless top law firm.
I don't believe the Constitution requires a balanced budget or for us to protectionist, I don't see how you can put anyone in jail.If every single lawyer would read and learn the Constitution and fight for this country, perhaps we wouldn't be in this financial mess to begin with; or at least there would be people IN JAIL for the almost collapse of the US economy.
What the...huh?Elizabeth999 wrote:OK..so perhaps you are right and the jobs are not there...ok...so there are many other reasons to get a law degree...least of all learning what laws govern your very existence and how the Federal Reserve is printing so much $$ I wouldn't worry too much about 100K of debt since our money is worthless anyway....I wish I was joking..
Nevertheless..it really isn't cool to scare people who are already scared enough trying to work their way through a very difficult venture. The skills and learning you gain from school will pay off....People who work in those firms making big $$ probably make minimum wage if you count the hundreds and thousands of hours they work....
That being said, it is always good to look at the negative as well as the positives in any situation. Really, why don't you use that great law degree to hold some of our elected representative accountable for defrauding the American people. We Americans tend to be quite self serving but if we all don't get our heads out of the sand soon...well, the situation will be bleaker than not getting a top job in some soulless top law firm.
If every single lawyer would read and learn the Constitution and fight for this country, perhaps we wouldn't be in this financial mess to begin with; or at least there would be people IN JAIL for the almost collapse of the US economy.
Tried mass mailing last year, doing it again this year (started about a month ago). Still haven't figured out exactly what networking entails, but I've asked all my lawyer friends if they know about anything, for what that's worth.digitalcntrl wrote:Did'nt try mass mailing, networking, etc.? Lots of peeps with good grades/schools don't seem to get jobs because of a lack of thorough job search (not saying this is you).johnnyutah wrote: To be fair, you don't have to have awful grades to not find a job. I'm a t-14 3L who struck out at both last year's and this year's OCI despite grades that place me somewhere between median and top third. OP's unwillingness to disclose does seem to indicate that OP has done bad, but that doesn't necessarily mean that OP's views on job prospects are totally unfounded.
Note: I'm still happy I went to law school.
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