Law in Contemporary Society

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FernandoGarciaFirstEssay 4 - 06 Jun 2024 - Main.EbenMoglen
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It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.
 

A (Revised) Reflection on Choosing a Practice

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 My motivation behind choosing a practice that focuses on systemic issues within the criminal justice and immigration systems is deeply personal, based on my lived experience. I was born in Guatemala and, alongside my family, I moved to the United States as a child. My experience with the US immigration system will forever be part of my life—and my family was extremely fortunate. It took us eleven years to become US citizens, but many members of my extended family do not enjoy the same legal status I do. Some members of my family persevered through their college education, but are not authorized to work in this country. Moreover, members of my family have been incarcerated and even deported back to our homeland. Growing up having to constantly worry about mine and my family’s legal status, and the implications thereof, helped me realize that these systems cannot remain in their current form. It is my goal that the damage they have caused my family, and countless other families, does not persist.
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Good, this was helpful to you, I hope.

Where means literally geographically where. Lawyers have licenses granted by states, and political economies depenednt on where they choose to live.

What means literally what: hat services do you perform for which clients and how do you make money by charging for them?

With whom, means literally with whom: what is the network of people in and surrounding your practice that make it possible for you to serve clients and who help you find and be retained by the clients your income depends on serving.

How much means literally how much: how many clients can you serve at what prices in order to produce what income minus the expenses of serving which are your profits, which must be enough.

Why means not what is the story of your childhood, or what is your motivation, but literally why do you believe that providing these particular services to these clients will meet your material, intellectual, social and political needs, which means saying what those needs are and considering how they will be met.

It is not an objection that you haven't answered a single one of those questions: as you say, you haven't actually been through the exercise and it isn't time yet. More important, however, is your decision to take yourself out of the road altogether. You say you can't have a practice of your own and need to work for someone else first. Fine, of course. That's your way and you should journey on it. But in Planning Your Practice we plan actual practices, so you probably don't want to spend effort on it.

 

FernandoGarciaFirstEssay 3 - 17 May 2024 - Main.FernandoGarcia
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META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

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A (Poorly-Written) Reflection on Choosing a Practice

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A (Revised) Reflection on Choosing a Practice

 -- By FernandoGarcia - 24 Feb 2024
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Choosing a practice—while superficially may appear to be an individual choice—does not preclude external considerations. At the end of the day, I must decide what I want to do with my life; my education; my career. In principle, the choice is an easy one: pick yourself; do what is best for you alone and pay no regard to anything else. Of course, it can never be that easy—at least not for me. Thinking only of myself feels selfish. I did not get here by myself, why should I be the exclusive benefactor?
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When I began this course, I mistakenly believed that ignoring Columbia’s push towards large firms was a sacrifice; foregoing the salary and lifestyle that firms advertise for a life of low pay, grueling work, and instability. This was premised on the incorrect assumption that one cannot find adequate compensation, comfort, or stability in one’s own practice. Moreover, I believed choosing between my practice and my community were antithetical to one another. I now see that they are instead intertwined: my objectives self-evidently include objectives for my family and my community such that these need not be traded off against one another. To quote Eben, “the point [in choosing your practice] is to be the strategist, not the instrument in someone else’s hand.” To become the strategist, I will plan my practice by following the scheme used in Planning Your Practice: (1) Where you want it to be; (2) What you want to work on; (3) With whom you want to practice; (4) How much you need; and (5) Why you feel that practice achieves your intellectual, moral, political and social as well as material goals. Though I have not taken the course, and considering that planning one’s practice is an ongoing exercise, this essay is a starting point, to which I will periodically return to as I navigate law school.
 
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In class, Eben repeatedly encourages us to break free from what law school “teaches” us. He points out that there is more to life than earning a quarter-million-dollar salary. While that may be true, nevertheless, that amount is, for many of us, impossible to ignore—it is more money than many of us have ever made, more than many of our families have ever made. Here lies the first hurdle I must overcome on the path to choosing myself and finding my practice. Having been raised in scarcity, turning down a salary that high feels ungrateful, almost immoral. Sucha salary brings with it a sense of financial security previously unbeknownst to me. A substantial motivation behind my educational journey was upward financial mobility. In a sense, a high salary—securing my financial future—is what this has all been about. Turning the high-paying job down is essentially throwing (financial) caution to the wind, and I have too much to lose to take that risk.
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What do you want to work on?

I begin with the second prong because answering this question determines the first prong. I want to use my legal education to study systemic issues regarding the intersection between the criminal justice and immigration systems, particularly around sentencing, as well as immigration detention and removal. My interest in these areas is both legal and social. I want to build my understanding of the American criminal justice, carceral, and immigration systems so I may navigate them on behalf of my clients. Additionally, I want to use my education to effect systemic change upon these institutions responsible for incalculable pain and suffering.

Where do you want your practice to be?

Upon reflecting on the previous prong, it has become evident that I would find it impossible to build my practice at a large firm. There, I would have no say over the clients I represent. Moreover, the goals of the firm and its clients will likely not align with my own—they may even run contrary to mine. In sum, I cannot build my practice at a large firm because joining such a firm would make me an instrument in someone else’s hand, as Eben puts it. Admittedly, the question of where is difficult to answer at this early stage in my legal education and career, though it can nonetheless be answered broadly. Because the work I want my practice to focus on is primarily dictated by federal policy, I would need to be close to Washington, D.C., ideally working for a nonprofit, a government agency, or in Congress—a place where, unlike at a large firm, I would have more agency when choosing the values, clients, and social effects of my practice.

With whom do you want to practice?

I would stray, at this point in my career, from stating that I would not wish to practice with anyone. That is to say, I do not yet possess either the business acumen or the requisite knowledge of the legal profession to build a private practice—at this stage, I am more prepared to join an existing, like-minded practice. Choosing an organization that sufficiently aligns with my practice is, in itself, an exercise of agency over the clients I would serve and to what end. While starting at a direct services organization would allow me to aid to those who need it while I learn to navigate the systems I want to change, such work is not conducive to the ultimate goal of my practice—systemic change. Helping guide vulnerable people through these treacherous systems is laudable, but my goal is to eliminate the inequities of the existing systems. Doing so through direct legal aid can only be effectively achieved through impact litigation and a victory at the US Supreme Court—an extremely difficult and highly unlikely result.
 
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There are also cultural considerations which I feel are impossible to ignore. I am the oldest son in my family; I was raised to always be of service to my younger siblings and my parents. After having lived placing others’ well-being above mine, thinking only of myself feels unnatural. This is obviously a significant obstacle when choosing your practice is inherently selfish. Moreover, as an immigrant, I believe I can never make a truly self-interested choice—especially not one as consequential as this one. My parents gave up their lives in our homeland to emigrate to the United States because they believed they could secure a better future for their children. A substantial component of the future which my parents dreamed of involves financial stability for their children. Taking the high-paying job would see their goal unequivocally accomplished. Conversely, turning that amount of money down would put that all at risk. I cannot, in good conscience, throw away their sacrifice.
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How much do you need?

In a previous version of this essay, money played a central role in my analysis of building a practice. I argued that the financial stability that comes with a big law salary is too valuable to pass up. However, choosing your own practice and financial stability are not mutually exclusive. As Eben points out, if my material need is for the take-home equivalent of what will be left after taxes from a large firm salary, then that is what my practice must be planned to provide. Though that is much easier said than done, acknowledging it as a goal will suffice for this essay.
 
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Similar to the future my parents envisioned for their children, I want to secure the best possible future for my family. The corporate salary, though not guaranteed, is much more likely to secure better opportunities for my children than a significantly lower one. The power of money in our society is impossible to ignore. Money grants access to better schools, better counselors and advisors, better networks, better jobs, better opportunities. Without even mentioning access to a healthier lifestyle or the countless other societal benefits money can bring, the consequence of financial security is undeniable. Surrendering my practice for a high salary seems like a fair trade to me.
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Why you feel that practice achieves your intellectual, moral, political and social, as well as material goals?

My motivation behind choosing a practice that focuses on systemic issues within the criminal justice and immigration systems is deeply personal, based on my lived experience. I was born in Guatemala and, alongside my family, I moved to the United States as a child. My experience with the US immigration system will forever be part of my life—and my family was extremely fortunate. It took us eleven years to become US citizens, but many members of my extended family do not enjoy the same legal status I do. Some members of my family persevered through their college education, but are not authorized to work in this country. Moreover, members of my family have been incarcerated and even deported back to our homeland. Growing up having to constantly worry about mine and my family’s legal status, and the implications thereof, helped me realize that these systems cannot remain in their current form. It is my goal that the damage they have caused my family, and countless other families, does not persist.
 
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Allowing myself the liberty to assume I could make that selfish choice, I would not know where or how to start building my practice. I came to law school with a broad, idealistic desire to effect change in the American carceral and immigration systems. I suppose that would be a good place to start building a practice. However, Eben’s discussion of how criminal defense attorneys earn their money has since turned me away from the profession. I imagine representing immigrants during removal proceedings is similar. Helping people during the most difficult time in their lives sounds like an ideal way to leverage my legal education, but taking their houses to collect payment feels immoral; that is not the kind of practice I want to build.

Deciding on my future can never be a truly personal decision. The myriad of external considerations weighs too heavily to ignore. Even assuming I could make a truly isolated, personal decision, the gap between the safety of the big-law salary and the uncertainty and significantly lower salary that almost undoubtedly comes from choosing my practice is too large to bet my future on.

Describing your writing as poor is neither prudent nor true. The draft we have isn't poorly written at all. It needs a hard edit. Every word in every sentence not pulling its weight should be removed. Every clause in every sentence not pushing forward the idea the sentence is supposed to communicate must go. You can and should get 200 words back at a minimum from that exercise. You need the space.

The draft can be improved more substantively than in its execution. There is no logical coherence to the idea that you aren't making your own decisions if you are considering needs beside your own. Whenever we are leading anything (a class, a firm, a case, a family) we are certainly considering others' needs. No legal practice can exist without putting the client's needs before the lawyer's after all. That the definition of minimal professional responsibility, Making strategy is always about defining objectives, assessing resources, collecting necessary resources not yet to hand, and achieving as many of the objectives as possible given the actual resources available. So the point isn't whether your objectives include objectives for your family, your community, your society: they self-evidently will. Nor whether objectives will have to be traded off against one another. That's also certain. The point is to be the strategist, not the instrument in someone else's hands.

I am serving here in the role of straw man. What I haven't said and don't think is presented as my thinking, presumably because that's easier to dismiss than my actual point. I have not said one should earn less from one's practice than, given all the relevant considerations, one needs. That would be defective strategy indeed, but I'm not stupid. Your practice must be planned and executed so as to meet all your needs: material, intellectual, moral, social and political. When I teach Planning Your Practice, which perhaps we will work in together, the point is to plan such practices, not ones that fall short in any dimension. If your material need is for the take-home equivalent of what will be left after taxes from a large firm salary of $250k (which is likely to be somewhere between $175k and $200k), then that's what your practice must be planned to provide. There are many ways to make that living. Whether the best way is to work 3000 hours a year on cases you don't choose for clients you can't change whose goals aren't yours and from which the social effect may in your judgment be harmful,, at a rough billing equivalent of $60-70/hour (about three times NYC living wage) is a different question, one that you avoid by sufficiently mischaracterizing my argument that the real issue disappears entirely.

Let's try a draft in which you state what your practice needs are, following the scheme we use in Planning Your Practice:

  • Where you want it to be;
  • What you want to work on;
  • With Whom you want to practice;
  • How Much you need; and
  • Why you feel that practice achieves your intellectual, moral, political and social as well as material goals.

Those are the actual choices you need the education, the skills, the freedom and the determination to make. As you continuously reassess your answers to those questions as you go through law school, you will get better at answering them and worse at ignoring them. That's what a good legal education does to help make you a great lawyer. Not asking those questions because you are diverted by the psychoactive effect of money does not actually lead to a good life for you, or for those whose lives you are trying to make better. Law school—I have said and do think—is an imagination test. Almost everybody fails. The most common mode of failure is not showing up for the exam. I'm trying to help you show up. Let's see what we can do now, from where we are. I look forward to reading the next draft.


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:
 

FernandoGarciaFirstEssay 2 - 29 Mar 2024 - Main.EbenMoglen
Line: 1 to 1
 
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"

It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

Line: 20 to 20
  Deciding on my future can never be a truly personal decision. The myriad of external considerations weighs too heavily to ignore. Even assuming I could make a truly isolated, personal decision, the gap between the safety of the big-law salary and the uncertainty and significantly lower salary that almost undoubtedly comes from choosing my practice is too large to bet my future on.
Added:
>
>
Describing your writing as poor is neither prudent nor true. The draft we have isn't poorly written at all. It needs a hard edit. Every word in every sentence not pulling its weight should be removed. Every clause in every sentence not pushing forward the idea the sentence is supposed to communicate must go. You can and should get 200 words back at a minimum from that exercise. You need the space.

The draft can be improved more substantively than in its execution. There is no logical coherence to the idea that you aren't making your own decisions if you are considering needs beside your own. Whenever we are leading anything (a class, a firm, a case, a family) we are certainly considering others' needs. No legal practice can exist without putting the client's needs before the lawyer's after all. That the definition of minimal professional responsibility, Making strategy is always about defining objectives, assessing resources, collecting necessary resources not yet to hand, and achieving as many of the objectives as possible given the actual resources available. So the point isn't whether your objectives include objectives for your family, your community, your society: they self-evidently will. Nor whether objectives will have to be traded off against one another. That's also certain. The point is to be the strategist, not the instrument in someone else's hands.

I am serving here in the role of straw man. What I haven't said and don't think is presented as my thinking, presumably because that's easier to dismiss than my actual point. I have not said one should earn less from one's practice than, given all the relevant considerations, one needs. That would be defective strategy indeed, but I'm not stupid. Your practice must be planned and executed so as to meet all your needs: material, intellectual, moral, social and political. When I teach Planning Your Practice, which perhaps we will work in together, the point is to plan such practices, not ones that fall short in any dimension. If your material need is for the take-home equivalent of what will be left after taxes from a large firm salary of $250k (which is likely to be somewhere between $175k and $200k), then that's what your practice must be planned to provide. There are many ways to make that living. Whether the best way is to work 3000 hours a year on cases you don't choose for clients you can't change whose goals aren't yours and from which the social effect may in your judgment be harmful,, at a rough billing equivalent of $60-70/hour (about three times NYC living wage) is a different question, one that you avoid by sufficiently mischaracterizing my argument that the real issue disappears entirely.

Let's try a draft in which you state what your practice needs are, following the scheme we use in Planning Your Practice:

  • Where you want it to be;
  • What you want to work on;
  • With Whom you want to practice;
  • How Much you need; and
  • Why you feel that practice achieves your intellectual, moral, political and social as well as material goals.

Those are the actual choices you need the education, the skills, the freedom and the determination to make. As you continuously reassess your answers to those questions as you go through law school, you will get better at answering them and worse at ignoring them. That's what a good legal education does to help make you a great lawyer. Not asking those questions because you are diverted by the psychoactive effect of money does not actually lead to a good life for you, or for those whose lives you are trying to make better. Law school—I have said and do think—is an imagination test. Almost everybody fails. The most common mode of failure is not showing up for the exam. I'm trying to help you show up. Let's see what we can do now, from where we are. I look forward to reading the next draft.

 
You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable.

FernandoGarciaFirstEssay 1 - 24 Feb 2024 - Main.FernandoGarcia
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Added:
>
>
META TOPICPARENT name="FirstEssay"
It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted.

A (Poorly-Written) Reflection on Choosing a Practice

-- By FernandoGarcia - 24 Feb 2024

Choosing a practice—while superficially may appear to be an individual choice—does not preclude external considerations. At the end of the day, I must decide what I want to do with my life; my education; my career. In principle, the choice is an easy one: pick yourself; do what is best for you alone and pay no regard to anything else. Of course, it can never be that easy—at least not for me. Thinking only of myself feels selfish. I did not get here by myself, why should I be the exclusive benefactor?

In class, Eben repeatedly encourages us to break free from what law school “teaches” us. He points out that there is more to life than earning a quarter-million-dollar salary. While that may be true, nevertheless, that amount is, for many of us, impossible to ignore—it is more money than many of us have ever made, more than many of our families have ever made. Here lies the first hurdle I must overcome on the path to choosing myself and finding my practice. Having been raised in scarcity, turning down a salary that high feels ungrateful, almost immoral. Sucha salary brings with it a sense of financial security previously unbeknownst to me. A substantial motivation behind my educational journey was upward financial mobility. In a sense, a high salary—securing my financial future—is what this has all been about. Turning the high-paying job down is essentially throwing (financial) caution to the wind, and I have too much to lose to take that risk.

There are also cultural considerations which I feel are impossible to ignore. I am the oldest son in my family; I was raised to always be of service to my younger siblings and my parents. After having lived placing others’ well-being above mine, thinking only of myself feels unnatural. This is obviously a significant obstacle when choosing your practice is inherently selfish. Moreover, as an immigrant, I believe I can never make a truly self-interested choice—especially not one as consequential as this one. My parents gave up their lives in our homeland to emigrate to the United States because they believed they could secure a better future for their children. A substantial component of the future which my parents dreamed of involves financial stability for their children. Taking the high-paying job would see their goal unequivocally accomplished. Conversely, turning that amount of money down would put that all at risk. I cannot, in good conscience, throw away their sacrifice.

Similar to the future my parents envisioned for their children, I want to secure the best possible future for my family. The corporate salary, though not guaranteed, is much more likely to secure better opportunities for my children than a significantly lower one. The power of money in our society is impossible to ignore. Money grants access to better schools, better counselors and advisors, better networks, better jobs, better opportunities. Without even mentioning access to a healthier lifestyle or the countless other societal benefits money can bring, the consequence of financial security is undeniable. Surrendering my practice for a high salary seems like a fair trade to me.

Allowing myself the liberty to assume I could make that selfish choice, I would not know where or how to start building my practice. I came to law school with a broad, idealistic desire to effect change in the American carceral and immigration systems. I suppose that would be a good place to start building a practice. However, Eben’s discussion of how criminal defense attorneys earn their money has since turned me away from the profession. I imagine representing immigrants during removal proceedings is similar. Helping people during the most difficult time in their lives sounds like an ideal way to leverage my legal education, but taking their houses to collect payment feels immoral; that is not the kind of practice I want to build.

Deciding on my future can never be a truly personal decision. The myriad of external considerations weighs too heavily to ignore. Even assuming I could make a truly isolated, personal decision, the gap between the safety of the big-law salary and the uncertainty and significantly lower salary that almost undoubtedly comes from choosing my practice is too large to bet my future on.


You are entitled to restrict access to your paper if you want to. But we all derive immense benefit from reading one another's work, and I hope you won't feel the need unless the subject matter is personal and its disclosure would be harmful or undesirable. To restrict access to your paper simply delete the "#" character on the next two lines:

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Revision 4r4 - 06 Jun 2024 - 15:43:23 - EbenMoglen
Revision 3r3 - 17 May 2024 - 23:34:06 - FernandoGarcia
Revision 2r2 - 29 Mar 2024 - 23:11:36 - EbenMoglen
Revision 1r1 - 24 Feb 2024 - 02:27:02 - FernandoGarcia
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