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CaptainScraps posted:You people are monsters. Some people live their lives 6 minutes at a time.
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 22:23 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 11:18 |
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Solomon Grundy posted:And then you get to bill for an appeal, too. You mean you skipped motion for reconsideration and went right on to the appeal?
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# ? Oct 31, 2010 23:14 |
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Alaemon posted:You mean you skipped motion for reconsideration and went right on to the appeal? Sometimes you know you're gonna get nowhere with the judge...of course if you can bill for it and your client doesn't care, might as well start there. You need some new evidence though, not just the judge getting the law wrong, don't you?
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 00:43 |
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Alaemon posted:You mean you skipped motion for reconsideration and went right on to the appeal? Note that we were both talking about winning an MSJ, which typically results in a final judgment (putting aside any 56(d) partial summary judgment stuff).
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 01:24 |
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Defleshed posted:Haha it's so funny how much different Army JAG is than Marine JAG. I was an enlisted Marine and I'll take chillaxing behind my desk as an Army JAG over that oorah semper fidelis motivator bullshit anytime, I care not if there are fatbodies sitting next to me. I went the opposite way. Army brat my entire life, then Marines as a JA.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 01:26 |
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joat mon posted:I went the opposite way. Army brat my entire life, then Marines as a JA. IDF or GTFO. Buncha pussies.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 05:11 |
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J Miracle posted:You need some new evidence though, not just the judge getting the law wrong, don't you? That's the theory. However it rarely stops the attorneys who practice in front of my judge. Most of the reconsideration motions that cross my desk are of the "I don't like how you ruled, so change it" variety.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 05:32 |
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I got into Georgetown People have been supportive so I need you guys to remind me that I'll die by my own hand, penniless and alone.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 07:18 |
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Trash Can Man posted:I got into Georgetown Nah you're a snowflake, you're good
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 07:47 |
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Trash Can Man posted:I got into Georgetown
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 13:56 |
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Ersatz posted:Congrats. Do Section 3. It will make law school interesting for the first year. Is that the CLS curriculum?
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 14:14 |
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Trash Can Man posted:I got into Georgetown This has already been posted on this thread, but http://abovethelaw.com/2010/04/update-on-the-georgetown-law-grad-who-sold-his-j-d-on-craigslist/
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 15:19 |
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Ersatz posted:Congrats. Do Section 3. It will make law school interesting for the first year. +1 for Section 3. Don't forget to drink every morning.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 15:20 |
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I vote against Section 3. It's even more removed from the realities of law practice than your typical law school experience. You spend 1 year learning all sorts of crit legal theories that have zero, and I do mean zero, application to your career as an attorney. You will sit through lecture after lecture of incredibly abstract, postmodernist critiques of the law, and while this area of legal scholarship is quite interesting as an academic exercise, it really skews your perspective about legal practice. The harm: Section 3 distracts you from an appropriate career search, it doesn't help you figure out what kind of law you want to practice. I know many people from Section 3, all of them are great people. Most of them hate the practice of law.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:04 |
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entris posted:I know many people from Section 3, all of them are great people. Most of them hate the practice of law. Maybe this is because the practice of law is truly hateful ~*~ also, DC goons - the video game case goes before SCOTUS tomorrow at 10 AM.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:44 |
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Trash Can Man posted:I got into Georgetown Congrats. Worst case scenario, in theory you can use their awesome gym to get yolked and then marry into East Coast wealth.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 17:53 |
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Petey posted:also, DC goons - the video game case goes before SCOTUS tomorrow at 10 AM. Can you provide a one paragraph case brief please?
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 18:01 |
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Got a lateral offer! Just waiting on background/reference checks, and I'm out. e: Submitted a resume Thursday afternoon, called to setup interview Thursday night, interview Friday, offer Friday. gvibes fucked around with this message at 18:29 on Nov 1, 2010 |
# ? Nov 1, 2010 18:20 |
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gvibes posted:Got a lateral offer! Hell yeah way to go. Thread doing good today.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 18:26 |
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entris posted:Can you provide a one paragraph case brief please? short: http://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/eanf quote:Issue: (1) Whether the First Amendment permits any limits on offensive content in violent video games sold to minors; and (2) whether a state regulation for displaying offensive, harmful images to children is invalid if it fails to satisfy the exacting “strict scrutiny” standard of review. background: http://www.scotusblog.com/?p=107224 goony brief: quote:Although the parties agree that videogames are constitutionally protected expression, the State of California nevertheless asks this Court to find that violent videogames “are simply not worthy of constitutional protection when sold to minors without parental participation.”3 The State asks the Court to make this judgment while providing only a single example of a game it deems to be violent—and offering essentially no context regarding the expressive nature of games that could fall under the Act. Meanwhile, one of the State’s amici supporters, seizing on the State’s theme that games are valueless, asks the Court to declare that videogames are not protected expression at all. from: http://www.igda.org/sites/default/files/IGDA-AIAS-AmicusBrief-SCHvEMA.pdf
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 18:30 |
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So what classes do you guys recommend taking spring of 1L year? Course registration is starting soon and I don't know what the gently caress. Post easy classes I can get an A in please.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 18:47 |
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entris posted:I know many people from Section 3, all of them are great people. Most of them hate the practice of law. I would add that being in "Section 3" at Georgetown is certainly not a prerequisite for hating the practice of law. Petey posted:some poo poo Who the hell wrote an amicus brief to advocate for video games to not be protected speech? Harry Ellis posted:Do you already have a job lined up? Alternatively, are you resigned to unemployment and just want to enjoy yourself while you can? Hahaha employers don't care which courses you take they only care about your GPA and class rank, so make it easy on yourself and arrange a schedule which maximizes Xbox and alcohol consumption time. Defleshed fucked around with this message at 19:03 on Nov 1, 2010 |
# ? Nov 1, 2010 18:59 |
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blar posted:I will be enjoying my last semester of law school with the following courses: (1) Emotion and the Law; (2) The Wire Seminar. For a fleeting moment I thought about possibly taking Family Law or Business Associations but then I remembered that I'm paying BarBri $2,000. gently caress all of you who won't be writing a 15 page take-home final on Hamsterdam. Do you already have a job lined up? Alternatively, are you resigned to unemployment and just want to enjoy yourself while you can? It blows my mind that anyone still in law school in this market would be hamstringing themselves with a schedule like this while their more desperate colleagues load up on clinics and other classes that don't scream lazy to would be employers.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:00 |
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Harry Ellis posted:Do you already have a job lined up? Alternatively, are you resigned to unemployment and just want to enjoy yourself while you can? There are so many recent law grads applying for jobs that I'll bet employers look at A)where you went to school and B) what your GPA was. I doubt they spend time looking through course listings.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:06 |
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entris posted:There are so many recent law grads applying for jobs that I'll bet employers look at A)where you went to school and B) what your GPA was. I doubt they spend time looking through course listings. Defleshed posted:Hahaha employers don't care which courses you take they only care about your GPA and class rank, so make it easy on yourself and arrange a schedule which maximizes Xbox and alcohol consumption time. Sure, but getting an interview doesn't exactly guarantee you a job anymore. I don't know about your experience, but every starting associate position I've applied to requires an unofficial transcript and I've been asked about my electives during interviews. For instance my last interviewer grilled me on the fact that I took mostly transactional electives and was applying for a litigation position. At some point it's going to come down to you and the other guy(s); I'd rather be the guy who took BA... Harry Ellis fucked around with this message at 19:52 on Nov 1, 2010 |
# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:49 |
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Harry Ellis posted:
That's a fair point. I don't think a law student should load up on strange electives, but 1-3 "Emotion and the Law" courses probably won't hurt, so long as the rest of your choices are relevant to the area of law that you want to be in.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 19:55 |
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Defleshed posted:Who the hell wrote an amicus brief to advocate for video games to not be protected speech? Several right wing 'save the children' groups. The brief I linked argues for protection.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 20:49 |
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Harry Ellis posted:Do you already have a job lined up? Alternatively, are you resigned to unemployment and just want to enjoy yourself while you can? I'm working full-time at a civil litigation firm next semester and if that doesn't pan out then I have a guaranteed job in immigration. Employment with a big/mid-size firm has not been available to me since I struck out in 2L OCI. In fact, taking a 4 credit BA course would only limit the amount of hours I could work getting hands-on experience. At this point, real experience as well as time spent networking is far more beneficial than raising my hand in BA. Immigration is the only field I've experienced where employers actually care if you completed any relevant course work. Everyone else simply focuses on GPA or class rank. I mean if your resume or cover letter can't overcome the stench of laziness on your transcripts then I don't know what to tell you. I know outside of immigration I've never had to list my coursework as the highlights of my resume skill-set.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 21:22 |
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blar posted:I'm working full-time at a civil litigation firm next semester and if that doesn't pan out then I have a guaranteed job in immigration. Employment with a big/mid-size firm has not been available to me since I struck out in 2L OCI. In fact, taking a 4 credit BA course would only limit the amount of hours I could work getting hands-on experience. At this point, real experience as well as time spent networking is far more beneficial than raising my hand in BA. OK that makes sense; your post read to me like those 2 classes were all you were doing last semester.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 21:33 |
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blar posted:I'm working full-time at a civil litigation firm next semester and if that doesn't pan out then I have a guaranteed job in immigration. Employment with a big/mid-size firm has not been available to me since I struck out in 2L OCI. In fact, taking a 4 credit BA course would only limit the amount of hours I could work getting hands-on experience. At this point, real experience as well as time spent networking is far more beneficial than raising my hand in BA. Would you mind if I sent you some questions? I'm a 1L interested in getting into immigration law and was wondering a few things about the field.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 21:36 |
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Direwolf posted:Would you mind if I sent you some questions? I'm a 1L interested in getting into immigration law and was wondering a few things about the field. Absolutely just send me a PM. Unfortunately you missed the deadline for DOJ SLIP with their immigration court for your 1L summer but I can walk you through how to get into that position next year.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 21:45 |
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Hello law thread. Despite having read your warnings time and again in my consideration of what the hell i'm going to do for a job in life, I've somehow come back to law time and again, and i'm trying to narrow down what schools i want to send my applications to. I'm going to be graduating with my major in English, with minors Philosophy, Political Science, and Character in Leadership studies (new program at our school focusing on leadership. not much substance to it, but it's not hard, and it sounds nice on paper.) I got a 157 on the LSAT, and I anticipate about 3.8 out of 4.0 GPA when I'm all said and done. I am particularly interested in Intellectual property law. Also, i'd prefer if I could either stay in the upper midwest, or end up somewhere on the upper west coast, simply because of the climate, terrain, outdoors activities stuff, for where i'd like to end up living. As much as i'd like to just be able to throw out an application to every decent school in both of those areas, that would A. be very expensive and B. just postpone having to choose. So, in addition to doing some research on my own, I thought I'd ask the knowledgeable goons here what they think would be good suggestions for schools.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 21:54 |
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Oldsrocket_27 posted:I'm going to be graduating with my major in English, with minors Philosophy, Political Science, and Character in Leadership studies (new program at our school focusing on leadership. quote:
No. quote:I got a 157 on the LSAT Don't go to law school.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:02 |
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Oldsrocket_27 posted:I got a 157 on the LSAT, Work in rights/contracts at a publishing house. Or be a paralegal or something.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:09 |
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Totally loving the GBS hysterics over "6 year old girl can be sued for bicycle accident."
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:11 |
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Oldsrocket_27 posted:I am particularly interested in Intellectual property law.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:25 |
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As far as IP law is concerned, unless you're talking Copyright or Trademark, you need a technical background to even be considered. A 4 year degree in a hard science is (I believe) required to sit for the patent bar, although I believe you can prosecute patents without having that background. Whether anyone would give you a job doing that without the background is another story entirely. Your GPA is pretty good, but you must MUST retake the LSAT. A 157 will not get you into any school worth going to, (the schools worth going to right now are the Top 14 of the USNWR rankings, and even that is debatable). I can't say it enough: don't go anywhere that accepts you with a 157. I got a 159 and went to the "best" school I could get into in my geographic area. This was before the bust in the "wayback" days of 2006. I did well in law school, but I couldn't get a legal job if my life depended on it. The job I currently hold is awesome but is entirely based on my experience prior to law school, and does not require a JD. In essence I wasted $200k and 3.5 years of my life (evening program). At a school with a median LSAT accepted of 161.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:41 |
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Alaemon posted:Totally loving the GBS hysterics over "6 year old girl can be sued for bicycle accident." The court orders garnishment of any future wages from lawn-mowings, lemonade stands, and/or bake sales.
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:43 |
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judging by responses, I think i need to clarify: I mentioned intellectual property because I find it interesting, so that's the direction I'd like to go if it's possible. I don't mind if I don't end up in a big firm, or make shittons of cash, or any of that. I want to do something I find interesting for a living. If that's not possible, so be it, I'm just trying to give a general idea of what interests me. I know full well that i'm not smart enough/didn't score high enough on the LSAT/don't have the best undergrad degree(though the academic advidors at my college were insistent that it was not so much an issue. they could be wrong and I wouldn't know. It;s too late now) at to get into a top tier school. I would be satisfied going to a t2 school and getting a job in a small firm and just making a living. If that isn't remotely possible, then, fine, I'd more than willing to listen to suggestions of other areas of law that would be more fitting. I do have my mind set on law, and I have spent a lot of time considering my other options, and i'd appreciate if we could avoid repeating all of the OP's information about why law school is a bad idea. I've read it time and again, and I know the kind of debt/job market hell that it entails. I'm looking for advice here, not a flat out "you're too stupid, go away"
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:50 |
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 11:18 |
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Oldsrocket_27 posted:I'm looking for advice here, not a flat out "you're too stupid, go away" If you really, really really want to be a lawyer: Study your rear end off for the LSAT and get a 170+
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# ? Nov 1, 2010 22:51 |