Too Many Lawyers (and I'm Glad I'm Not One of Them)
by
Andrew S. Fischer
by Andrew S. Fischer
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It's hard to
escape the fact that we have too many lawyers in the U.S. One
website pegs the total at a monstrous 1,000,000. In his book,
The
Death of Common Sense, author Philip K. Howard convincingly
bemoans the negative impact of this huge number. It's aptly subtitled
"How Law is Suffocating America," and one anecdote after another
confirms its truth. The associated overbearing, nitpicking government
regulation and bureaucracy are also exposed in the book.
In my own experience,
I had three college chums who, having no real direction, decided
to become lawyers simply because it was a way to "make a good living."
This says a lot: they had no interest in law whatsoever, no craving
for "justice" in either a practical or abstract sense just a
desire to make money. I had been friends with one of them since
seventh grade, and never did he mention any interest in matters
legal although on one occasion he did express irritation over
the unjust nature of marijuana laws. (No, he didn't become a "community
legal services" firebrand instead he's a well-paid litigator
at a regional law firm with hundreds of partners.) Like it or not
and I didn't my friends were motivated solely by a desire
to obtain massive amounts of legal tender. Thirty-odd years later,
there's no doubt that they've achieved their goal.
I, too, succumbed
briefly to the "make a good living" mantra, after two frustrating
years of pinballing around the job market of the early 70's. The
best of those opportunities had been a position as an inside steel
salesman, where I never sold a single rod. Essentially, I merely
produced quotes for inquiring customers. At Xmas time, I received
a turkey and a $25 bonus, before taxes. Depressed and "nudged" by
my parents, I took the LSAT and applied to several local, budget
law schools and soon matriculated at the most logical.
I quickly discovered
that my fellow law students were far more interested in becoming
lawyers than I was. In fact, it was their sole raison d'être,
and I found myself increasingly irritated by it. As had been the
case with my buddies, their motivation was a craving for "career"
rather than justice. I recall being shocked when I asked around
after we'd been subjected to a psychological questionnaire, and
found that the most important things on Earth to some of my fellow
"justice-seekers" were happiness and friendship, as opposed to what
I'd selected from the list: truth and wisdom. (Justice was a close
third.)
It wasn't long
before I got into trouble. Bothered by the plight of a female classmate
and potential ladyfriend who fared poorly under the oppressive Socratic
method, I politely declined to participate when called upon in contracts
class. Much drawing of breath and astonished "oohs and aahs" from
my classmates followed (since "passing" was not allowed by first-year
students). I immediately found myself in a petty power struggle
with my arrogant and condescending professor, and facing swift expulsion
from his little kingdom. Apparently "academic freedom" applied to
the faculty but not the students, since my professor was permitted
to expel me from his course for any violation of his rules, no matter
how absurd.
My stand made
the university newspaper's front page two days running, and actually
threatened to break into the city papers. I gave a modest speech
about freedom in one of the lecture halls and met with the Dean.
The second-year students supported and advised me; these were starry-eyed
liberals, secure that they would finish their three years and pass
the bar exam. No support was forthcoming from the third-year students,
however they were too close to graduation and wanted nothing
to taint the school's reputation, and perhaps limit their job prospects.
My fellow first-year students disapproved of my actions by a 10
to 1 ratio some out of fear, but most because I had been so "self-important"
as to break the rules.
A faculty tribunal
was quickly scheduled. The buzz was that the vote would be something
like 20 to 3 against me. I'd be kicked out of contracts class and
wouldn't be carrying a full course load, which could lead to immediate
expulsion from law school at the whim of the powers that be. At
best, I'd have to re-take contracts during the summer, an unpleasant
prospect. Then the second-year students brokered a deal: I'd only
have to speak once more in my professor's class, I could preface
it with a speech about academic freedom, and I'd be appointed to
some new student-teacher relations committee. Not a bad deal for
me, I suppose, but what about my female friend, and others like
her?
To my everlasting
shame I took the deal. My speech was quite trenchant, full of power
and glory, fairness and freedom, but it was lost on my classmates,
whose shibboleth remained "must... become... a... lawyer...." Things
went back to normal. The dean publicly claimed credit for brokering
the settlement, when in reality he had been nothing but a nuisance.
The student-teacher committee was a sham, and I left it swiftly.
My other professors were careful not to call on me, fearing, quite
rightly, that I would refuse to participate in their classes, just
as I'd done in contracts. My potential ladyfriend struggled but
got better over time (and she would, in fact, graduate), but I felt
regret that while I'd succeeded in being left alone, I wasn't able
to help anyone else.
Moreover, I'd
seen too much politicking over what was clearly an issue of justice,
fairness and freedom. The dean was obviously nothing but a political
animal, a glad-handing prevaricator who smiled out of every corner
and cranny of his mouth. My professor was a pompous jerk who was
concerned about absolutely nothing but winning our altercation.
My other professors couldn't have cared less about the entire brouhaha.
"These are people I'm supposed to look up to?" I thought. "This
is what it means to be a lawyer?" My fellow students were, by turns,
whimpering toadies who always followed the rules, or save-the-world
types who would soon morph into six-figure ambulance chasers. Yes,
there were some who were human, but most were just sharks-to-be.
My little challenge
had caused me to lapse in my studies a bit, which was a problem,
but, more significantly, I had seen enough. On a chilly December
afternoon, twenty minutes before contracts class was due to begin,
I scrawled an unpleasant message on the blackboard and walked away.
I didn't have much respect for the law when I entered law school,
and I left it with far less. Yes, there are too many lawyers, but
at least I can feel glad I'm not one of them.
January
9, 2007
Andrew
S. Fischer [send him mail] is
a controller for an investment advisory firm in Pennsylvania.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
Andrew
S. Fischer
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