Did you just ask whether we can blame lawyers for breaking the law?
I am being educated in a system that incentivizes me to chase currency before my aspirations, though unintentionally.
What is
"incentivizing" you? The education or the system? And so
what if you are "incentivized"? I'm sure I'm
"incentivized" to make bad decisions all the time. But I
don't make them anyway.
When the Hyde is sufficiently feed within us the Jekyll component becomes compromised. When a six-figure loan meets a young scholar who thought they would use their law degree to save some unrepresented neighborhood or population, unfortunately the loans tends to win without sufficient guidance as to how to make this ambition profitable. Too often you hear a law school graduate talk of how they will go to a big law firm only to practice for a couple of years till their loans are paid off. Too often you hear a senior associate talk of how they planned on practicing for just a couple of years but it was too hard to walk away from the lifestyle they were accustomed to living. Too often you hear a ex lawyer who quit the profession because the big firm life made them unhappy. This idea that one must first pass through a big law firm before pursuing ones goals is crippling the legal system.
No evidence for this
statement. It may be crippling some people. But what has that to
do with whether the "system" is hurt?
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