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shadowfrost000 wrote:I don't understand why people want to become lawyers just to make money.
For such a high scoring group of individuals, TLS is fucking retarded.
Obviously money is a factor for the vast majority of law students. Who takes on 150k+ in debt and pretends that money isn't an issue because "I just love the law."
Get back to me in a year and half when you're median at your t10 and don't have an offer. But hey, it's cool, at least you didn't come for the money.
let/them/eat/cake wrote:can't believe no one posted this yet.
"the dye is cast."
see also "their is a shortage."
that person is a moron. or not so subtle flame. but, in my mind, i'm going with the former.
nothing's rosy. but even in a good economy, things don't work out for imbeciles.
I was so tempted to point that out - glad someone else did. Knowing the difference between "there" and "their" is often helpful getting and keeping jobs in a profession where writing well is a necessary skill. Also, I can't think of any city where you would HAVE to pay $1500 in rent... I've lived in two of the most expensive cities in the U.S. and never paid more than $1000, usually less. Seems like a flame to me.
let/them/eat/cake wrote:can't believe no one posted this yet.
"the dye is cast."
see also "their is a shortage."
that person is a moron. or not so subtle flame. but, in my mind, i'm going with the former.
nothing's rosy. but even in a good economy, things don't work out for imbeciles.
I was so tempted to point that out - glad someone else did. Knowing the difference between "there" and "their" is often helpful getting and keeping jobs in a profession where writing well is a necessary skill. Also, I can't think of any city where you would HAVE to pay $1500 in rent... I've lived in two of the most expensive cities in the U.S. and never paid more than $1000, usually less. Seems like a flame to me.
i think "the dye is cast" is even better. I picture a Monty Python sketch where they're just throwing purple paint everywhere while crossing the river.
shadowfrost000 wrote:I don't understand why people want to become lawyers just to make money.
For such a high scoring group of individuals, TLS is fucking retarded.
Obviously money is a factor for the vast majority of law students. Who takes on 150k+ in debt and pretends that money isn't an issue because "I just love the law."
Get back to me in a year and half when you're median at your t10 and don't have an offer. But hey, it's cool, at least you didn't come for the money.
This site is extremely frustrating sometimes... people don't understand the value of money or the effect that debt has on your personal financial situation. Going to a school like Fordham and paying sticker is absolutely moronic if you are financing the entire thing with loans. $200k with compounding interest and no absolute guarantee of a BigLaw job is totally silly. Even with biglaw, that amount of debt is staggering. The way things are going right now it is making more and more sense to take a full ride at a strong regional T2 like Cincy, at least you will be debt-free at graduation.
We're left wondering:
what happened to this person at OCI
whether he actually passed the bar (It sounds like the jobs he did get were admin work that don't require bar passage)
No, the 90th % is a 164... so a 95% is probably straddling the 170s range.
We're left wondering:
what happened to this person at OCI
whether he actually passed the bar (It sounds like the jobs he did get were admin work that don't require bar passage)
No, the 90th % is a 164... so a 95% is probably straddling the 170s range.
We're left wondering:
what happened to this person at OCI
whether he actually passed the bar (It sounds like the jobs he did get were admin work that don't require bar passage)
No, the 90th % is a 164... so a 95% is probably straddling the 170s range.
OMFG. You are an idiot. the numbers are published, and the curve is fixed... you could just look them up, but I know a few of the numbers off the top of my head:
163-88%
164-90%
165-92%
170-98%
173-99%
e: there is actually a large statistical difference between a 165 and 170... it's not "just a few questions you got lucky on".
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.