I have been studying the legal profession for a long time, being an civil engineer that is exposed to a lot of law.
I have seen the creep that you have to be a lawyer to be a judge. And the lawyers are only 5% minorities (1% in cleveland and other major cities).
Because of the long schooling time and huge sums of money to get a law degree, is it "by the people". Some say we need lawyers to understand the law to be judges, but since the law is the basis for all interaction between "the people", has it passed into history like limited government, a theory no longer practiced.
Yet, anyone can be a senator, and they WRITE the laws, should we make it so only lawyers can be in any political office, and the rest of "the people" are screwed.
thoughts I can make fun of?
Allan
I have seen the creep that you have to be a lawyer to be a judge. And the lawyers are only 5% minorities (1% in cleveland and other major cities).
Because of the long schooling time and huge sums of money to get a law degree, is it "by the people". Some say we need lawyers to understand the law to be judges, but since the law is the basis for all interaction between "the people", has it passed into history like limited government, a theory no longer practiced.
Yet, anyone can be a senator, and they WRITE the laws, should we make it so only lawyers can be in any political office, and the rest of "the people" are screwed.
thoughts I can make fun of?
Allan

