| Readings That Remind Us of Class
This topic seems to have taken off a little, which is nice. I'm thinking that in the interest of usability, it might be worthwhile to a) break this topic into subtopics, for example by link topic (e.g. Law School, Politics, Lawyer Stories, etc), which would allow for some more discussion on related topics (rather than the free-for-all we have now), and b) to make those subtopics available under this page and linked to from this page (because I think it would be pretty that way). This would also allow the integration of a number of orphan posts from a few weeks ago, including the last link discussion which is somewhat towards the bottom of the index and hasn't been changed since January. What do you think? | | -- GloverWright - 4 March 2010 | |
< < | Unconventional Wisdom: An Interview with Doug Henwood
Q: What electoral policies should the U.S. left be pursuing? Or are we already focused too much on electoral efforts?
A: I’d say we’re focused too much on electoral efforts. To me, the most promising thing would be to organize around very specific issues, like living wage or single-payer campaigns – things that have great potential appeal and can unite a lot of constituencies in a common struggle. I wouldn’t rule out electoral politics, of course – you don’t want to give up on the state. But nothing higher than the House. When you get to the Senate, and especially the presidential level, you’re on the bourgeoisie’s terrain. None of the third-party or insurgent Dem campaigns -- Jackson, Nader, Kucinich, McKinney? , whatever -- has ever broken away from the cult of personality trap and become an occasion for a real national organizing effort. A presidential campaign just isn’t the place to do that sort of thing, something that the last 20 or 30 years has pretty conclusively proved. It’s best to organize independent movements and parties that might, if we’re lucky, force the higher-ups to take notice. I was impressed, in reading that debased bit of political gossip Game Change, to learn how bent out of shape Hillary Clinton was by the complaints of the antiwar movement. She was really concerned, and her husband spent hours in the King David Hotel, of all places, writing a devious letter on her behalf, meant to defuse the opposition’s threat. It was all bullshit, of course, but it shows that an active left can have an influence even on the most centrist of Dems. That lesson seems to have been lost, at least until now, in relation to the Obama administration, whose various offenses have been denied, excused, or indulged by unions, peaceniks, greens, and other people who should be behaving better.
-- GloverWright - 2 March 2010 | | A young lawyer who didn't get to pawn his license
"an interesting essay by a lawyer who graduated in 2007 into the waiting arms of unemployment. He decided to begin helping people who were deep underwater on their mortgages by trying to get them loan modifications. This is the story of his first client and his first encounter with Wells Fargo. Also includes an interesting side note about new California law that discourages lawyers from taking on these types of cases."
-- JohnSchwab - 26 Feb 2010 | |
< < | Why she went to law school
-- DRussellKraft - 24 Feb 2010 | | "DNA's Dirty Little Secret"
This article concerns "cold hit" DNA prosecutions. These occur when the police, with no particular suspect in mind, run DNA evidence through a database of prior offenders. This method has a high probability of false matches, one-third in the case in the article, but is still used as key evidence at trial.
-- JohnAlbanese - 25 Feb 2010 | |
< < | Harvard 3Ls Can't Find Jobs
Do people really believe that, even at the top law schools, they're entitled to a 160K job? No profession other than law allows 25 year olds to make that kind of money with no relevant work experience and by judging them on one year of grades and a name. We are basically handed summer associate positions at EIP next fall- that is a deal that is too good to be true and anyone who has even a toe in the real world should have known it wasn't going to last.
| | This article anticipates our class discussion of the Leff piece. Saks Fifth Avenue's new ad campaign uses "wit and whimsy" to get customers back into their stores. After all, customers can still have "fun" during "serious times."
FOR EXAMPLE, although the average customer can no longer afford to buy both a new tunic and a matching belt, Saks "wittily" and "whimsically" suggests the customer buy the tunic and use her husband's "old tie" as a belt. Lovely! |
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