As Roy Orbison would say:
Lincoln Adams | February 12, 2007 @ 3:14 pmAfter going back and forth with the local law school that accepted me into their part time program, I finally made a decision.
I will not attend law school.
I knew if it was meant to be, the pieces would fall into place. Instead, my school absolutely refused to give me any leeway in granting me a schedule that wouldn’t conflict with my working hours. After conferring with my admissions counselor, the director of admissions, the assistant dean, and finally the dean himself, they flatly stated I must adhere to THEIR schedule, and I would be unable to change it should I be assigned to classes that fall within my working hours. For $25,000 a year and a debt load that will surpass more than a $100,000, this is how they’re going to treat me?
Up yours, law school.
Let’s get one thing straight: I don’t play by your rules. If I should ever attend law school sometime in this life, it will be under MY terms. The bottomline is, you’re all full of crap. You perpetuate a system that robs people of their financial freedom, commit academic fraud by doing virtually nothing to prepare your students for the real world of lawyering, and encourage the use of a grading curve that promotes back stabbing competition, as well as the false notion that students are doing well in classes when in fact they are HORRIBLE students, and are only surviving school because of their inflated grades.
Simply put: You SUCK.
I wanted to be a lawyer for charitable reasons, but I finally had to come clean and concede that I don’t really love the law enough to survive the perils of law school, and especially the legal profession itself. It does interest me at times, but it’s certainly nothing I’m passionate about. I don’t like the idea of writing dry memos and briefs all day long, and certainly not as a junior associate slave for some two bit law firm. Reading legal material is absurdly boring as well, mostly because it’s hard to digest the pompous and sometimes godawful writings of judges and attorneys who had probably failed third grade English during their adolescent years.
I also realized my debt load would severely limit my options and would make me a slave to my loans unless I somehow struck it rich with a case or won the lottery. By not attending law school, I will be completely debt free in the space of a year, and at that point I will be beholden to no one. I can probably do more good as a non-lawyer who is debt free then as a practicing attorney who is over $100,000 in debt.
However, life can be a funny old dog sometimes. While I have decided not to attend law school now, it doesn’t mean the door won’t suddenly open up later on in life. There’s a saying in Scripture where God promises His people that they would be “the head, and not the tail.” I know the time will be right for me when I can attend law school as a head beholden to no one, rather than a tail who would be at the mercy of a corrupt and perverse legal establishment.
Though I’m a bit disappointed, I do feel like a heavy burden has been lifted from my shoulders. Now I can focus on getting myself healthy again, exploring interests and hobbies that I could truly be passionate about, and of course last but not least: finding the girl of my dreams. 
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Tags: academic fraud, admissions counselor, bottomline, curve, debt load, financial, financial freedom, freedom, law school, lawyering, leeway, legal material, legal profession, memos, part time, perils, pompous, real world, time program
Categories: Legally Speaking
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10 Responses to “As Roy Orbison would say:”
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well, it’s for the better any way my friend. The law does not serve the people::::very often. And when it does; it’s probably a fluke.
You would have just been pissed off in the end, with your debt and the disillusionment of thinking you would have made the world a better place. they would have tossed your logical and charity driven love of humanity, out on your ear. trust me. If you can’t lie, cheat and wreak havoc with political prowess, you can’t help anything. you are too good of a person with too big of a heart. people like us, can’t do good in this world. heh. unless u’d like to end up on the cross as well. ;-0
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Wow. Why do you even open your ****hole of a mouth?
Leave DevilDogs_Doll alone. Honestly… have a more open mind here. Be more considerate for other people… especially ones that you don’t know.
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Frizzeh, what in the blue f*** are you talking about?
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Dude, that’s too bad. Maybe you could claim to invent something really cool, like teh Intertubes, and make millions of dollars selling books about how to improve the planet all the while having a carbon footprint the size of Texas!
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I’d settle for the love of a good woman.
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Linc, you should leverage your backgrounds in computer science and in law enforcement by getting the Advanced Certificate in Security Management and Forensics here at Stevens. It consists of four classes and you can take them online. That should be good for a job transfer to computer crimes. http://webcampus.stevens.edu
-Mike
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You can do it online and become a California lawyer. The school is accredited in California. You might be able to practice in your state, depending on where you live. At the very least you’d have an advanced degree, and you’d be a California lawyer.
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Hi Aimee!
What’s the name of the school? From what I know the ABA frowns on distance learning and online courses, so it’s unusual to see an accredited school offering this kind of curriculum.
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I have never heard of an online law school. My sister is getting her bachelor’s degree online but is planning to go to graduate school in a brick-and-mortar school. You can get masters degrees at Stevens online, but you have to take exactly what they offer because most of the classes aren’t online. I think that is the case with most online programs, as Stevens is consider a leader in online education. For something beyond a masters, I would think that you would have to actually go someplace physically.
-Mike
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The ABA I think actually requires physical attendance, though not for a student’s health and well being. They’re one of the prime reasons why a legal education is so obscenely expensive.
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