Studying law is suffering
Studying law is suffering
Fuck law.
But it prints money
yeah true I would have done it to if I had the drive and if it wasn't so over-saturated in australia.
There is no such thing as too many lawyers. As long as there will be humans, there will be law and as long as there is law, there will be lawyers who will grill you out of your savings
What year?
What we're dealing with here is a total lack of respect for the law
1st. I know, I know, easiest year, but the material is the dry as shit left in a desert and im a brainlet
I honestly don't even know if I studying it; I plan on going straight into politics but it's not like a degree is required seeing as how literal mall santas have won congressional races a few districts over from me.
*should continue studying
I'm very tired.
>I plan on going straight into politics
When you’re president, you better post a time stamped photo of yourself on Jow Forums.
And you?
Better praise Kek.
How's studying law?
I consider doing it because my talents seem to fit it (liking to read, having been good in languages and humanities in school)
well if you enjoy reading that by golly jgee go right ahead, because reading gonna be 80% of work outside of school. Of course, you are getting an education in one of the more respected fields with good career aplications, so there's that.
But Honestly, its Interesting if Dull. Also buy a dictionary
>but the material is the dry
this is law as it is - dry, boring language and tonns of useless shit to remember
>tonns of useless shit to remember
and yet, if you dont know this, you can get out memed in court by someone who does
I don't understand what attracts people to study law. Texts are dry and boring - as mentioned - and the starting salary is not that great.
man if you learn and remember every article in civil law you will be the best lawyer in the whole lithuania
Gross floor
Funniest thing about Law, is that, unless its explicitly forbbiden in some sort of legal document, its completely legal.
Thats why so many laws are complicated or stupid. Somebody did this in the past so the goverment had to pass a law for it
I also sometimes do this when I'm peeing
I'm studying law too, in decent uni, but only because I have no idea what am I doing with my life. Feels bad man
you still have the time to switch to STEM
I wanted to study Engineering, but i got into Uni and realised it's more about programming than it is Math and Physics these days.
Probably just going to join the Army t b h
Try programming cunt.
Can't, never took my math exam in highschool. Also STEM is overrated
Wrong. Studying any kind of engineering is.
>had my last option to get my bachelors degree this morning, an oral exam in geotechnical engineering
>my last subject after 6,5 years studying a Bachelors degree which is planned to be done in only 3 years (even tho only turbonerds manage to do it now time)
>already tried to pass this exam three times without success
>fuck it up in front of the professor, don’t manage to answer the most simple answer due to my extreme anxiety
>tell him about my situation and that I suffer severe depression and anxiety that doesn’t let m think properly in critical situations.
>tells me I deserve to fail but he will let me know his final decision on monday by email
Fuck my life, I give up.
Gonna have a poli sci degree soon but don't wanna do law even though many in my family encourage me to. I'm very lazy and would probably feel like ass and drop if I did. Then I'd be in loads of debt. At least now I have none.
I'm a bit fucked desu since a poli sci degree is shit on it's own.
how do u enter uni in lithuania
in greece and latvia you have to give national high school finals
I think it's pretty interesting content but there are a lot of insufferable cunts in the school.
>he doesn't know about the abysmally low law graduate employment rate in Australia
Akchually it might get easier for you next year as you are already familiar with the basics.
Same here
lol good luck getting hired when millions of indians do the same shit at 1/10 of the money you ask
First year in Australia was extremely boring and quite difficult for me. I think they leave interesting content out because they know that people are going to have to adjust to the new way of learning/working/studying/thinking, and don't want them to miss anything super-important or worthwhile in that period of adjustment.
Here the 1st year was all about political economy and Roman law, the rest was walk in the park.
Now as sophomore (2nd year) is all about criminal law divided into two separate classes: materiality and procedure/process.
Proceedings or criminal prosecution is a bitch, I'll be lucky if I pass on the first term as drop rate is 50% or more.
But as mentioned, it's wort it as job and career opportunities after the graduation and especially after making the state bar exam are virtually limitless.
>why yes, I have a degree in Lithuanian law
yup, amerimutt flag, had to be expected.
were you a good student?
it's continentinal law, dumbass
Fuck you
no
>Doing stem
Don't do it if you value your health, sleep schedule, or want to improve your social life.
that bad, huh?
That's jive. I loved studying it.
Hated the practice of it -- specifically, dealing with lawyers.
t. former California lawyer
>There is no such thing as too many lawyers.
>mfw practicing in CA
>mfw practicing in CA as a foreign-trained lawyer
I'm still surprised how I got a non-immigration firm job less than four months after getting my license, which is hard even for ABA-accredited law school graduates I'm told.
>>mfw practicing in CA as a foreign-trained lawyer
Dude, licensed in CA? You passed the bar, foreign-trained?
Not too shabby.
Just because you're styding something, doesn't mean you'll be required to. I finished IT Management but i'm looking foward to be a Police Investigator.
compared to where I was trained and became a lawyer first, CA pass rate is high, though the CA bar is also challenging in its own way. My OG jurisdiction actually has more MD's than licensed lawyers.
Where were you trained?
I went out with a lawyer from Taiwan, went to the top law school there, went to U. Pennsylvania Law School, really smart and all that crap. I think, at the time, there was some law that allowed only a small percentage (5-10%) to become licensed.
But she just couldn't do the California bar.
Philippines. We don't have restrictions like you mentioned. It's just that our exams are hard(er than it should be). My batch's unadjusted passing rate was 14% (adjusted was 17.5% IIRC)
I'm actually a terribad student. Saying more would be equivalent to just posting my name because I don't think anyone JUSTed/unJUSTed themselves as hard as me.