Even way back when I was in law school, we always joked that our law professors couldn't cut it in private practice, wore a hideous tie to work one day and that was it.
I think I have told the story before about my first year contracts professor. He stopped me after class one day and asked, "Miss aggiehawg, what do you want to do with your law degree?" I flippantly replied, "I have a god complex. I want to be a judge." He chuckled and replied, "If you have a god complex, become a law professor with the power to tell a student they will never be a lawyer. More powerful than being a judge."
But one thing I did notice about my classmates. They were of two minds. One side felt that law school was a conservatizing experience. Learning the rules and how to abide and deal with them. (Me.) And the other felt it was liberal, making them more focused on learning to use the law to stick it to the government and tear down the status quo.
I think I have told the story before about my first year contracts professor. He stopped me after class one day and asked, "Miss aggiehawg, what do you want to do with your law degree?" I flippantly replied, "I have a god complex. I want to be a judge." He chuckled and replied, "If you have a god complex, become a law professor with the power to tell a student they will never be a lawyer. More powerful than being a judge."
But one thing I did notice about my classmates. They were of two minds. One side felt that law school was a conservatizing experience. Learning the rules and how to abide and deal with them. (Me.) And the other felt it was liberal, making them more focused on learning to use the law to stick it to the government and tear down the status quo.