Posted on 08/30/2016 5:28:45 PM PDT by BlackFemaleArmyColonel
Thanks this will be used many many times’
More important than how she got her law license, is how she lost it. SHE LIED!
Aw jeez, I should have known that by now. But hey, he’s cool! Hope he gives the left fits!
He should only be focusing on her Clinton Foundation corruption as Secretary of State and before, carelessness with our state secrets, discrediting the families of dead Benghazi victims, not something this petty and ancient.
Clint Eastwood.
I nominate him as moderator in the debate.
Or Tom Selleck.
She was busy caring for a poor, quadriplegic, minority child who was paralyzed after being shot by assault rifle wielded by an alt-rightist who was trying to keep her from attending a desegregated school.
She simply didn’t have enough time to study properly.
I don't know if it's relevant to this but my wife is an attorney and when she left her job she was no longer covered by her employers blanket malpractice insurance, which lawyers are required to maintain. Consequently she had to either begin writing large checks just to keep her license active or let it go into inactive state, which does not allow her to practice law but also does not require the insurance. Reactivating it is a simple matter if she decides to go back into the law.
Could this be what the Obama's were doing?
Nobody every pursued why Barry Onambla and the Wookie surrendered their law licenses....
Don’t think we will know anything about this until they are out of power and are no longer a danger.
LOL! I would love to see that! Sad to say though, it’s probably going to be some CNN lackey or Faux news jerk. There is really no news organization that isn’t bias against Trump, unless someone completely disconnected from any of these channels does the moderating.
I don't know anything about the Arkansas Bar Exam. The D.C. Bar Exam was easy because most law schools concentrate on teaching the federal rules and federal procedure, which are, for the most part, easy to grasp, logical, and well organized. D.C. mirrors the federal system almost perfectly, so you have been over it for three years before taking the exam. States east of the Mississippi, at least at that time, were a scrambled blend of common law pleading, arcane rules and procedural statures, and what-not left over from colonial times and reconstruction. Very little of that was logical, easy to grasp, or well organized. In fact, it was pretty much the opposite. The Virginia Bar Exam, which I also took at that time, and passed the first time, was much, much harder.
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