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Is Law School a Losing Game? (Yes!)
New York Times ^ | January 8, 2011 | DAVID SEGAL

Posted on 01/09/2011 5:40:41 AM PST by reaganaut1

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To: JimWayne
Precedents should be the judge's job and should be optional for the person filing the complaint.

So the plaintiff should be able to choose which law applies to his case? I'd hate to be a defendant in that system.

In reality, judges are corrupt and when people go to courts expecting justice, the judges come up with frivolous technicalities to not take up the case on its merit.

Have any real-life examples? After all, a lot of people say little things like the 4th Amendment are "frivolous technicalities".

Many times, these are appealable but the plaintiff gives up because of the amount of money already lost.

So you think the system is skewed against plaintiffs? That sure makes the whole push for tort reform a head-scratcher.
41 posted on 01/09/2011 12:06:44 PM PST by The Pack Knight (Laugh, and the world laughs with you. Weep, and the world laughs at you.)
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To: Zap Brannigan
FYI - in California, those who graduate from non-ABA accredited law schools must take and pass the same bar exam as ABA-accredited graduates. The Board of Legal Examiners only administers one type of bar exam.

Yeah, that's been brought up in some distance learning forums. They also have a 'Baby Bar' exam (First Year Law Students' Exam).

A search came up with little on non ABA law programs outside of California. Either I'm out of date or just had it wrong.

This is interesting:

"The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has waived the usual requirement that all takers of the state bar examination must be graduates of an ABA-accredited law school for a licensed California attorney who got his law degree in 2004 from Concord Law School, a non-ABA-accredited online institution."

Cont... ABA Journal

42 posted on 01/09/2011 12:34:29 PM PST by decimon
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To: decimon

“I know only what I’ve read of this and what I’ve read is that people graduating with such degrees might work in the background doing research or other scut work. And that may be entirely wrong but I don’t know.”

From the standpoint of efficiency, it’s probably a very good thing. Just as a nurse practitioner is just as good as an internal medicine doc for giving a routine physical, there’s no need to be squandering high cost resources on doing work that really doesn’t require that high a level of education etc.


43 posted on 01/09/2011 1:29:05 PM PST by DrC
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