I was summoned to this thread by a concerned friend. Thanks for drawing my attention to this extravagant display of inaccuracies and squabble. I skimmed the posts and will comment on certain ignorant statements and misconceptions.
T14 or public law school: I tend to agree, but even then, there are exceptions. Let's get the naming conventions out of the way. T14 refers to the top 14 law school as defined by a national poll/test. Tier 1 refers generally to schools ranked 1 through 50. Tier 2 refers to schools ranked 51 through 100. Tier 3 and Tier 4 schools are not ranked, but are instead grouped into the categories of 'almost worthless' and 'worthless', respectively. Tier 1 schools are normally worth the money. A friend of mine graduated from Michigan with $120,000 in debt, but was immediately hired at $160,000 after graduating. Tier 1 students fill most private firm jobs. Tier 2 students fill the remainder. Tier 3 and Tier 4 graduates end up working as receptionists or paralegals, or for the state or federal government. That's if they are lucky. If they are not lucky, they didn't finish law school and had $80,000 in debt and no income as proof.
Outsourced lawyers: No time soon. I can see a paralegal's work getting outsourced, but not an attorney's. Not until the government allows foreign representatives without bar accreditation to represent clients in state and federal courts. And on that note, I am going to change "no time soon" to "never."
Associate pay, partner pay: It is true, attorneys bill at exorbitant rates. A decent family lawyer bills at $700 -- and that isn't some rich family's powerhouse attorney. That is a small firm principal. As much as people on this forum seem to hate the law profession, it is a completely necessary profession. The drafters of the U.S. Constitution were very intelligent attorneys. They ensured that the future of their profession would always be in high demand. And with good reason. People are fucking stupid. Someone here said that courtroom outcomes are based primarily on the intersection of law and facts. They seem to believe that in the court of law, only three questions are necessary: What are the facts? What are the applicable laws? Do the facts conform to the applicable law? As I said early, people are fucking stupid. The outcomes depend on the advocacy. Proper advocacy costs. A lot.
I didn't reply to everything. I started replying to more statements, but the shear lack of intelligence displayed by a few of you guys is repulsive.
And yes, there are probably typos and grammatical errors. I am too busy with ongoing patent infringement litigation to continue educating the wall that is P&N fanatics.
Tschuse.