As if the effort to open a law school in San Jose while nearby Golden Gate rusts away were not appalling enough, now there is another attempt to start one in northwestern Louisiana. One writer says "Hell, No" to a law school at Northwestern Louisiana University:
The most overlawyered state in the union categorically does not need, and should not tolerate, a directional school starting up a factory for more middling attorneys.
Indeed not. A similar attempt in Shreveport a few years ago failed after a pilot project with a handful of so-called students. The dreary Pelican State has four law schools already for its relatively small population and can ill afford a fifth.
The proposed law school would be publicly funded. Regulators in Tennessee rejected the Trojan horse of Valpo, a law school in Indiana that failed despite a heritage going back to the nineteenth century, on the grounds that it simply wasn't needed and that it would harm the many other law schools in Tennessee. Now it is proposed to waste badly needed money from Louisiana's public coffers on this vanity project when the evidence of recent experience suggests that there is inadequate demand for another law school in that part of the state, or any other.
People would not flock to that dire corner of Louisiana for the sake of attending this proposed flash in the pan of an über-toilet law school. It would attract perhaps a couple of dozen local students of doubtful quality and potential who for whatever reason were unable to move out of the area for law school. It would be another Indiana Tech—and recall that that poster child of greed and stupidity shut up shop after four humiliating years. At least Indiana Tech blew only its endowment on the ill-fated venture; Northwestern Louisiana University would require funds from the state, and a lot of them.
It is difficult indeed to make a go of a new law school today. The only success has been the U of Irvine, which benefited from advantages that bullshit upstarts in Louisiana and the like just don't enjoy. Accreditation is by no means assured, and students could easily be left high and dry, as many have been at other hopeless über-toilets. Existing law schools, however shitty themselves, have much more to offer, and prospective applicants know it. Few people will gamble on an unknown law school of no reputation and questionable potential, particularly in a desolate place with little demand for legal services.
Let us hope that sane heads will prevail and put the kibosh on this would-be flop.
What makes this even more outrageous is the parlous state of K-12 public education in Louisiana. The most polite way to describe these schools is "disaster" so if LA has public money to throw around, it ought to spend it teaching children to actually read and write.
ReplyDeleteBut here's the ugly truth: the new local law school has become the vanity project for local politicians. They'll take credit for helping minorities, supporting the local economy, and just generally ensuring justice...and it will all be permanently memorialized in a nice bronze plaque right by the entrance.
northern transplant down here. the whole system was privatized, but continues to get public money, for charter schools--all failures. the crop of kids and broken families dont make good students or wealthy enough for lawyer services.
DeleteTo me, the question is simple: Will this proposed law school be allowed to participate in the Federally-backed Student Loan Program? If yes, then the law school will likely succeed, if no, it will fail, that's a 100% guarantee. If it is allowed to participate in the Student Loan Program than it will succeed for the same reason that 11 law schools are succeeding in Florida, 10 in Pennsylvania, 16 in New York State, and so on. There will always be dullards who say "I can't find a good job with my Bachelor's Degree in Philosophy, so I'm going to Law School." Think about it, no pre-requisites, as discussed earlier, and, even more importantly, 1) it allows students to put off repaying their student loans from college for three years and 2) it allows them to live large on even MORE student loans! Some folks, after living off government loans for 7 full years will go on to even more graduate programs afterwards, and why not? It beats working for a living.
ReplyDeleteEven with access to federal funds, this pig will fail for having too few students. It just won't be able to generate enough money to stay afloat. Remember that Indiana Tech had access to student loans.
DeleteExactly, OG. Until recently, the school itself had no reason to care about demand for graduates in the market, because as long as they get accredited by ABA then they can get student loans. Then it is only demand for SEATS in the class, not demand for graduates in the market, that matters. Because student loans give an absolute guarantee that your school will be very profitable IF you can fill the seats without too much tuition discounting and without failing the ABA's already-modest bar passage rate standard (or at least not failing it too many years in a row). That's pretty much the sole determinant of law school profitability.
DeleteNo one read the employment disclosures anyway, so you need enough of your kids to pass the bar and you need to do it without bribing your way to higher LSATs too much. That's it. The students also haven't cared because historically your offer gets them easily covering rent for 3 years while doing something that appears practical to you parents while also being darned EASY (I mean c'mon, there's no prerequisites and also no homework because your entire grade for each class is one exam at the end). And they don't need to care about the loans because they know they can just put them on income-based repayment.
But lately, some schools cannot even manage to sell this incredibly appealing 3 year funded vacation siren song. Even the least informed students seem to be catching on that there's no jobs. So the schools enter a death spiral of needing to discount the price more and more until it becomes a cost center instead of a cash cow. That is something the parent university (or investor owners in the case of a for-profit) will not tolerate for long. Good.
The person who is proposing in San Jose to create a new law school is
ReplyDeleteState Senator David Dominic Cortese and he wants to merge his alma mater Lincoln Law School with the nearby California State University campus. Sounds like he has a vested interest for future employment there.
I used to stay in that part of the state. There is very little talent on the ground. It's all pine forests interspersed by shacks and meth labs. You will occasionally run across a small town with a deserted town square and a Walmart. The only excitement most people have is going to church 3X/week. Why anyone with any prospects would go to law school there is beyond me.
ReplyDeletePer DOE-or what's left of it:
ReplyDelete"Currently, 42.7 million borrowers owe more than $1.6 trillion in student debt, with only 38% of borrowers in repayment and current on their student loans."
So DOE will begin collecting, or more accurately trying to collect, on defaulted student loans, beginning today.
This most likely isn't going to go well, if 62% of student loan borrowers are at a minimum delinquent on their loans.
A lot of people say that solo practice does not usually work out. My question is how would one fare if they dedicate their solo practice to family law and deal with divorce cases?
ReplyDeleteYou'll still go broke. Nobody pays for legal services. The only way to make money out of law is to have a third party payer (ie an insurer) pay the costs. Ultimately family law fees are coming out of client's pockets so they just wont pay for anything.
DeleteThis is the simple truth: nobody wants to pay a lawyer.
DeleteThis is exactly one of the problems with law and why working in the medical field is profitable for employees. Also, the demand curves are reversed. No need for one new lawyer, let alone the hundreds that are admitted from the larger states year after year. Conversely, their are shortages in the medical field year after year because people don't like to care for others and think the grass will be greener doing something else.
DeleteIf you start a solo practice, no matter what you try to go into, divorces are probably going to end up what you're gonna be mostly doing, at least in my town. I call it "door law." No matter what you advertise, if you're a very small or solo firm, that is almost certainly what's gonna walk in the door.
DeleteThey all advertise for personal injury as well, just in case that proverbial lotto ticket of a case walks in, but of all the solos in my town like 90% of them are actually doing 90% family law day-to-day, with some criminal defense thrown in either as contract public defender work, or the occasional criminal defendant that actually has money (usually because its a black sheep adult-child and their parents pony up).
Is it viable? Sure, maybe. Going rate is circa 10k retainer and like 300 an hour, and our judges are good about letting you withdraw even if the client ends up pro per when they can't replenish. Overhead is also very low, so if you can get like 1-3 new clients per month who can actually plonk that down (or at least run up a credit card that much) and you bill diligently, it can be viable. But its often soul-crushing, Jerry Springer type fights. Plus its a real magnet for bar complaints given the emotions and often unrealistic client expectations involved.
Family "law" is not really law at all; it's a lot of bitching about assets and children (often treated practically as chattels). Seldom does a real question of law arise, but a lawyer is needed for practical reasons. A friend calls it filth, and I have to agree.
DeleteAgree, OG @ 2:58. I did that stuff for about 5 years. It was legal aid so I didn't have to worry about the clients paying, but in a way, that made it worse: They didn't have any financial incentive to settle so I had to do "limited scope" retainers that ended my engagement at defined points in time, otherwise I'd never get out. Especially when they're poor because then the kids are the only thing they have to fight over.
DeleteEven if you go all the way to trial, they'll be back in court before the ink is dry asking for a modification of the custody order because they will always find something to call "changed circumstances." Constantly calling the cops or CPS on each other, that sort of thing. Those aren't appeals, they're new matters that have arisen so they can go back to the trial court an unlimited number of times. These cases never end until all the kids are grown. And sometimes not even then, since there could be support arrearages or disabilities that extend the support obligation into adulthood, etc.
As always, it depends. Depends on the location, pool of possible clients, and more than anything else, one's skill at running a business and bringing in new PAYING clients. Natchitoches LA where NLU is located has a 34.8% poverty rate and median household income is 38, 731. Shreveport--23.6% poverty rate and median HHI is 48,465 per the latest census. How many people in this area can even afford an attorney, even if they need one? And I doubt there are very many businesses there with deep pockets to pay legal bills.
DeleteThat's another reason to avoid falling for the lie about practising in Bumblefuck, Nebraska: few people can pay for a lawyer or want to. And Bumblefuck, Louisiana, is no better.
DeleteI see a lot of graduates who went to low ranked schools often give up on practicing law and work in jobs invoking some sort of “compliance”.
ReplyDeleteShitwork akin to "document review", sort of a consolation prize for not really being able to practise law.
DeleteHonestly, am starting to come to the opinion that the only real lawyers are trial lawyers of some kind. Corporate transactional is just paper pushing bullshit which doesn't actually involve the law in any meaningful way outside of the boilerplate.
DeleteInsurance companies love to hire failed lawyers, for some reason. Some of them end up working with people who have nothing more than a high school diploma and some experience in the field. It really is hard for me to sympathize with people who don't do their research before applying to law school. A person who is dumb enough to go to a low-ranked law school in a state with 10-11 such institutions 1) probably won't find a job afterwards and 2) isn't smart enough to be a competent lawyer anyway.
DeleteAppellate litigation is the area in which the practice of law truly shines. There isn't much of it, though, and few lawyers will touch it with a bargepole. Those of us who can handle an appeal with aplomb are rare.
DeleteSome trial-level work is serious; some is not. And I've seen horrors at trial (and, yes, on appeal, too). Incompetence in the legal field is widespread.
There is no excuse in 2025 to enroll at an über-toilet or even a toilet. The facts are readily available. People who ignore them have only themselves to blame and get no sympathy from Old Guy.
Readers may like to know that the training of lawyers used to involve much more than it does today. Rhetoric was still essential to legal education at the turn of the twentieth century but was quickly abandoned. Most lawyers now have no rail background in oratory or writing or much of anything else that not so long ago was expected of them. Now they don't even learn much law.
ReplyDeleteWere the logic questions (Now abandoned so I've heard) on the LSAT a vestige of the expectation of rhetorical skills?
DeleteI doubt it. They have little to do with rhetoric.
DeleteAs I understand, the so-called games were eliminated, after a blind person complained that he could not practically draw diagrams in braille within the allotted time.
Well, I see rhetoric as language expressed in a logical form. The mental functions involved in solving logic problems and the construction of rhetoric should be similar.
DeleteThe Lawertalk Reddit just posted an ad from yet another Judge seeking a highly qualified Attorney to work for him, full-time, for no salary whatsoever, no benefits, nothing. I am quite certain he will get lots of applicants. This whole thing disgusts me. When I was a clerk at the AG's office in law school, one of the lawyers talked about "phasing out the pay" due to the "prestige" of working for the Attorney General's Office while in school. I gave him a big toothy grin and said "Just let me know, because if you 'phase out the pay' I will 'phase out the work' and stop showing up here." That ended the conversation. I would literally have rather worked as a fry cook for McDonalds' for minimum wage than paid for dry cleaning suits and shirts, polishing shoes, packing a lunch, and driving to and from a full time job at my own expense. I had far too much pride to be exploited like that, even as a young man in school. Seriously, please, if there is some broader way to get the message out--despite the irony of me, as successful lawyer, imploring others NOT to go to law school--I honestly believe that this scam has gotten completely out of control. People's lives are being badly affected by spending three years and hundreds of thousands of dollars, earning little or nothing during that timeframe, to getting a degree that is often entirely worthless. The US is quite literally going bankrupt, and funding worthless degree programs at colleges, law schools, and other institutions is a big part of the problem.
ReplyDeleteHi Dilbert113 (May 14th, 11:03 am)
DeleteSince at least the mid-90s, a lot of Federal agencies in Washington DC have hired law students and recent graduates as volunteer law clerks. I went this route, amounting to 1800 hours of work, although some of that was counted for law school credit. In an era of federal hiring freezes, government shutdowns, and level funding of agencies, this was the ONLY WAY one could get federal experience, and an entry point into the government, honors programs and other entry level hiring opportunities having been drastically reduced or eliminated.
As you might guess, I did not know this until it happened to me, after I had sunk an unbelievable sum of money into law school. I wrote up an account of this experience a couple of years ago. Give me a second to get the link.
Hi again Dilbert113 (May 14th, 11:03 am)
DeleteHere is the URL:
https://outsidethelawschoolscam.blogspot.com/2023/10/charleston-seeks-non-profit-status.html?m=0
This was the post on Charleston dated Oct. 25, 2023. There are 45 comments. My account is in comments 16-19.
My job situation was not as good as yours was, Dilbert, but even folks with better class rank and better schools had difficulty finding paid work in DC. Also, I had no interest in criminal law, whereas crime was still a booming industry in the 1990s in DC.
You mentioned the small size of DC, but the lawyer market there is not small at all because of the federal presence, which also spills over well into Maryland and Virginia. Of course, the hugeness of the government attracts law grads from everywhere making the job market difficult but not impossible like in many other places. There are actually 7 law schools, not 6, in the DC area. This includes George Mason, just a few subway stops outside the District.
Another factor contributing to the number of lawyers in DC is that the federal government will recognize the license of any state or territory as the qualification to practice.
DeleteState Bar Exams are run by retards who shouldn't be in charge: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/litigation/california-bar-says-three-exam-takers-scored-on-others-work
ReplyDeleteAssuming one enrolls in law school and realizes they don’t want to be lawyers anymore, when is it the best time to drop out and pursue something else?
ReplyDeleteImmediately. What purpose could there be in going on?
DeleteDepends on if it's an elite degree. A t-14 degree is probably still worth having depending on the debt required to finished the degree. If it's non -t-14 drop immediately.
DeleteYou can finish out the semester if it's too late to get any sort of refund, but otherwise as soon as you decide it's not for you, just run.
DeleteDo you think it is still a good idea if someone goes to a T14 law school intending to work in Biglaw? This is especially true in light of some Biglaw firms surrendering to the Trump administration.
ReplyDeleteIt is a bad idea to intend to work in Big Law. As we have explained repeatedly, jobs in Big Law seldom last more than a few years. Reportedly they are unpleasant while they do last.
DeleteThe plan you are describing is known as "Big Law or Bust." The great majority of people who enter law school with that plan bust as soon as they receive their first semester grades. Many people are smart, study hard, and do quite well in high school, on the SAT, in college, and on the LSAT. . .only to get C's on the brutal first-year law school "curve". This is because, while being smart and studying hard can lead to lots of A's in high school and college, law school is entirely different. Everyone at a good law school is smart, studies hard, and did well in undergrad. So being smart and studying hard, at a good law school, that and two dollars will get you a cup of coffee. In addition, as Old Guy pointed out, the "career" of most lawyers in Big Law is quite short. I have studied this extensively, the average tenure of a first-year associate in a large law firm is 4Y. Burning out from overwork and leaving 18M-2Y is common in sweatshops like Cravath. It turns out people don't like sleeping in their office, showering at the law firm gym, and essentially doing nothing but work and minimal eating and sleeping for weeks/months/years on end. In my eyes, spending 7Y in higher education (4Y college, 3Y law school), hundreds of thousands of dollars in tuition/books/living expenses, passing a 2-day Bar Exam, doing all that for a job that may end in 2-3Y is a terrible ROI. Do yourself a favor, and don't go down the well-trodden road of Big Law or Bust.
DeleteThere's the very real possibility of not getting into Big Law at all. Old Guy never wanted to go into Big Law, but he also couldn't get an interview anywhere, despite top grades and top honors and law review and shitloads of other gold stars billed inaccurately as Big Law credentials. Big Law wants certain types of people only: young, sexy, upper-crusty, urban, wealthy, with the ability to bring in paying clients thanks to well-placed connections. And, yes, for the most part male and white. Straight or closeted queer only, thank you very much. Disability is frowned upon. Certainly no left-wing rants in the office or elsewhere. Appearance must be conventional: visible tattoos, piercings, and the like will keep you out. Any sign of scholarliness or intellectuality is damning. If you don't fit the mold, you need not apply.
DeleteNote too that Big Law gets rid even of people who have made partner. Recent years have seen lots of cases, along with the creation of many positions that are off the equity track.
"There's the very real possibility of not getting into Big Law at all."
DeleteThat says it all; the reality is that nobody-as in close to zero-from a trash law school would get recruited by BigLaw; it just doesn't happen. A very select few from the most selective law schools get recruited-and that it's.
So BigLaw may be a terrible decision with a terrible lifestyle but it's not going to be a problem for virtually 100% of the graduates of trash law schools. So if you're planning to attend a law school outside of OG's tier one, you've got no worries about sleeping in your BigLaw office. Your worry is getting a job, any job, at graduation.
Is there any benefit to putting in 4 years in Big Law as there is with Big 4 Accounting? With Big 4 Accounting the objective is to put in enough time to get the work experience for CPA licensure and then use the prestige of working in Big 4 as the foundation to moving into corporate finance. Is there any equivalent to Big Law?
DeleteI went to a toilet myself. I don't know of any grads that went into big law but there were a few that secured positions in smaller boutique firms. However, they had prestige undergrad credentials. A tiny number got JAG appointments.
No. Once bounced out of Big Law, you are out on your ass. Big Law doesn't lead to grander things in general; it leads to solo practice and small-time shit. To parlay Big Law into anything decent, you have to hit the timing just right—after you have some experience but before you get sacked.
DeleteBig Law doesn't recruit people from toilets, other than a few with connections (who would have had access to Big Law anyway). JAG is another pipe dream, not the kind of thing that many can get—nor that many would want.
Here is the public record of the pension benefits received by retired NYC police officers.
Deletehttps://www.seethroughny.net/pensions/nyc-police-department-pension-fund
You will notices hundred of pensions in the 200-250k range. You will notice thousands in the 150k ranges. You will notice a few over 300k. A pension means you get that payment, which is partially tax free, for the rest of your life without having to work again.
Most of those people get those pensions starting in their early 40s. All you need is a high school diploma, two years of community college and a clean criminal record.
This is one department in one part of the country. There are legions of places with similar payment structures and there are quite a few places that are even more generous.
The chances of you earning a 200k salary are extraordinarily small, let alone a retirement package like that. In fact, you will likely earn alot less than that.
I earn more than 200k a year and I don’t know if I am going to have a job tomorrow. I am one of the lucky ones. This is a good outcome in law.
Law is exclusively for three types of people: 1) law school professors, 2) rich kids that want to pretend they succeeded solely to individual effort, 3) people that have the balls to break the rules and not get caught and 4) sociopaths. It is absolutely catastrophic for everyone else.
Biglaw is a temporary and awful 4 years for most people (7 years if you are lucky). The money you make will be absorbed by taxes, rent and COLA and you will have nothing to show for the work and stress.
You aren’t going to listen- I know that. I’m just showing you the information just in case.
25-30 years ago there were decent exit options from Big Law. Sometimes Big Law Associates would become in-house counsel for banks and large corporations they represented during their time with the firm, that sort of thing. Today, however, the legal job market is profoundly oversaturated. Leaving your job at a large law firm may well mean leaving the profession of law altogether. Personally, I have never been impressed by large law firms. A first-year associate in a large law firm working 70 hours a week may well earn about $60 per hour, pre-tax. That is less than most Public Defender's Offices pay "Panel Attorneys" to handle cases for them that they are conflicted out of, or simply don't have the staff to handle. It is often hard to find lawyers willing to work for such low wages. Now, while, say, a third year associate at a large law firm may earn closer to $90 per hour, pre tax, a bored, disheveled, vaguely competent DUI lawyer with several years of experience can and will earn $1,200 in ten minutes doing a quick plea in traffic court. That is not an exaggeration at all, I am in courthouses on a near daily basis dealing with various traffic and criminal matters, some lawyers charge $5,000 or more for a DUI case that can be handled in 2-3 hours, quite literally, from initial client contact to sentencing. Ditto various other offenses, theft, assaults, etc. The way lawyers earn money, good money, in real life, has nothing whatsoever to do the way things are portrayed on TV shows and in movies about lawyers. It is still possible to do well practicing law, but it isn't glamorous, sexy, etc. It it a hustle, and requires skills you never learn about during law school.
DeletePeople of integrity and intelligence will probably find law stultifying. Old Guy spends much of his time changing diapers rather than doing real legal work. The main problem is the shittiness of bench and bar, largely a consequence of the low standards that now prevail.
DeleteI think BigLaw does lead to some exit options in govt. Its still overall a bad idea, but many govt jobs do give preference to BigLaw grads.
DeleteHow is Law compared to accounting? Is the pay and job market better for people with accounting background? I have heard that accountants with CPA's are needed and there are more job openings than people with CPA's.
ReplyDeleteOverall it is better than law but still competitive. The best route is Big 4. But only a relatively small fraction of accounting grads will be hired by Big 4. Academically, getting into a Professional Accounting masters program might be another possible way to get into Big 4. By working for a smaller firm the CPA designation can still be obtained. Trying to get up the ladder in corporate accounting without a CPA will probably be a struggle. Government Accounting such as IRS might be a good path to leading to a stable permanent career with retirement benefits. It is probably easier for accounting graduates to secure federal employment than law graduates. IMO that would be a much better route than corporate accounting without a CPA. Also, in many states IRS experience can qualify for the CPA.
DeleteI got a several questions. I know that NYPD and other officers from other New York police departments make a lot of money. For example, the Nassau and Suffolk county police departments in New York are some of the highest paid with average salaries including are over $200,000 a year. Despite these high salaries, many of these police officers live a more middle class lifestyle compared to people who are more "professional" than them. I know many police officers in the NYC area and many of them will live in more middle class areas such as Rockland County or Staten Island compared to people with law degrees from average or lower tiered law schools who prefer to live in affluent towns in Westchester County, NY or Northern New Jersey. Many police officers I know also do not take any substantial vacations away from the region. At best, many police officers and their families will often go to a friends house a few hours away in a place such as Lake George. This in contrast to many lawyers with degrees from average or lower tiered schools who will often fly to a place for vacation at least once a year. These places are often in Europe such as Greece or in the Caribbean such as Aruba. I am not trying to generalize all police officers, but what do you think accounts for this difference I have observed?
ReplyDeleteClass structure. The officers still see themselves as working class people whereas the Lawyers don't.
DeleteI think the lawyers that you are observing as living in places like Westchester County are the most successful of attorneys. I cannot quantify the number of attorneys who are that successful, I would have to leave that to people such as Old Guy and Dilbert who seem to be able to arrive at those amounts but I would think that the percentage is rather small and within that skewed heavily towards elite schools.
DeleteAs far as the police, not all are making $200,000 and even for those who do, a place like Staten Island is not really that cheap. Many NYPD would probably want to live within the jurisdiction of NYC also. As far as vacation preferences, it could be a variety of factors, time availability, preferences, vacation home location, etc. I'm sure many NYPD take the occasional European jaunt.
The answer is quite easy: white collar professionals, especially lawyers, are subject to life style creep and are under a higher degree of pressure to live a life style that matches public perception of what it means to be a lawyer. Cops are under no such pressure.
DeleteThis actually compounds the wealth disparity because the only way to make it in the US today is to own your own business or invest aggressively in the markets. The cop is dumping all his money in an S&P mutual fund, whereas the lawyer is dropping his money on a fake life style.
Side note: I feel bad for people in shitlaw in this regard because living that way is mandatory for success. If a shitlaw client sees you not having the trappings of material success- lights out. In other areas of the law, you might be made to feel uncomfortable, but there’s no obligation to have a Mercedes to get clients.
A particularly foolish illusion is that of wealth stemming from expenditures. The smart money goes into that S&P index fund; the dumb money goes into new cars and trips to Aruba.
DeletePeople see the fancy car and assume that the owner is wealthy. Very likely the owner borrowed money to buy the depreciating asset. Old Guy had sooner buy an adequate car at a small fraction of the price and invest the difference.
That is what I am thinking. I believe cops, nurses and to some extent teachers see themselves as middle class or even working class, so they do not need compete with other people. I believe lawyers, even the ones that do not graduate from top schools, need to spend a lot of money in order to show an illusion of success. I suspect that a lot of those spending is either family money, or is funded by debt and heavy borrowing.
DeleteWhy the extended discussion about biglaw? If you attend a scam law school-which is about 99% of them-there is no chance of you getting hired by biglaw. As in none, zero, zilch. So if you attend scam school-anything outside OG's tier one-you have no worries.
ReplyDeleteAnd the practice of law is geographic, I guess. In my jd the conflicts counsel list is a mile long. Yes, the hourly rate is terrible, but it's a government check. And the lawyers who just hang out at the courthouse are legion, just hoping to catch a stray who has money. Very very few are earning good money; most are scrambling to get by. They are the very definition of the scam; got that JD but not the money to pay off the loans.
Police officers in strong unions get good salaries. Also, they work a lot of overtime and holidays with premium pay.
ReplyDeleteFrom my area, it seems people can get decent jobs if they attend an elite ivy league schools regardless of major. The problem is, for the most of the students who attend a non prestigious college and obtain a generic bachelor's degree, their options are quite limited. What are they supposed to do? This why so many will attend any law school that accepts them.
ReplyDeleteThat wasn't the case for Old Guy, who struggled for years after getting a degree from an élite Ivy League school.
DeleteUntil the 1950s or so, bachelor's degrees were so rare that indeed a degree of any kind led to good employment. Then schools started popping up all over the place, and people went to various institutions calling themselves colleges, only to find that a degree from the East Bumblefuck College of Theology was practically worthless—certainly next to one from Harvard.
This "working class/middle class" lifestyle got me thinking, from my observations many of the kids of "working/middle class" parents are actually seem to be doing better than the children of affluent "professionals". I went to an event at a church that is attended by working class people from The Bronx, Queens and parts of Long Island. The kids seem to be getting stable jobs. I saw two people who were attending a local dental school, one kid just got a job as a Physician Assistant and another kid works as a New York City Police Officer at a precinct in Queens. This in contrast many kids of affluent professionals who reside in affluent suburbs of Westchester of Northern New Jersey. They often attend expensive out of state schools and get degrees such as Business Administration, Marketing and Political Science. Then they get basic sales jobs, financial planning jobs or attend lower tiered law schools. Many of these people also get apartments in Manhattan while working these jobs or attending a lower tier school.
ReplyDeleteNo, they're not. And despite the two examples you gave, they will never be. That's just more of the sleight-of-hand illusion of meritocracy in society. I guarantee that the affluent kids, with their $5000+ median rents, and probably much more, have less than zero to worry about because they are Trust Fund Babies with Elite parents who can afford whatever their kids might want. Just because the working class Poors don't see it, doesn't mean it's not the case, i.e. trees falling alone in the forest.
Deletedid you hear about the administrations new requirements for universities to show gainful employment as a proportion of their tuition? Let's write an article on that!
ReplyDelete