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  #6091 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 11:57 AM
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WMH and Tan Peng Chin not bad
there are so many better established/known crim teams than this... QWP, WW @ Drew, HH @ R&T, SN @ WKW, and many more. suggest that OP do some research outside this forum as there really are many options



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  #6092 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 12:00 PM
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hahahaha. those are not real offers.
And you should intern at these family/criminal law firms before you say "i don't mind".
You’re damn right...
connection to billionaire etc, if these are not direct, i.e. your own parents, forget about it.
In law we call this connections you have no control over...
If your “uncle” (loosely used), knows so and so Lawyer, but it’s so far away, how to help you.
International firms require a steady stream of business, not your “uncle” who can give one or two personal injury cases and that’s it.
Unless your connections is from your parents, otherwise it’s a hollow connection. Useless.
You’ll come to realise this.

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  #6093 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 12:02 PM
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I do have connections. I go back every year for CNY, and family there introduced me to some lawyers. Some of them have already offered me jobs if I choose to study law. These are family/criminal law firms in Chinatown but I don't mind.
Are you trolling?

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  #6094 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 12:31 PM
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"Is it worth it to do x"

You want us to tell you that in spite of the ink spilled on the last 600+ pages, lawyering still is and will remain a path to, at the minimum, the upper middle class (the alternative being, of course, fantastical wealth).

You want us to tell you that the title "lawyer" still carries, in a superficial white-worshipping society that still clings to the neo-colonial structures it inherited, an elite and exclusive cachet to it.

You want us to tell you that being a lawyer will satisfy your parents and impress your Tinder hookups.

When you come back on summer and winter vacation, don't do the 2-week Big 4 gladhanding "I'm a rising third at Cambridge" so you can artificially boost your LinkedIn profile and take selfies with pretty high SES girls in tight bandage skirts with more UCAS points than IQ points for Instagram.

Go for internships at these Chinatown firms you named. See first hand what it's like to practise family and criminal law. Try and understand people who speak what you would hesitate to describe as English as you know it. In fact, try and talk to them. Understand that with your privileged, wealthy background, it will be some time before you actually comprehend why people live such different lives compared to you. You may never know why people don't just simply pay their fines or sell their houses. Surely people own more than one HDB, after all.

And above all, try and answer the question "Where are you studying?" as often as you can. Carefully study the reactions to your reply.

Know this: outside of the law, no one cares where you went to school, and the few that do probably can't find Melbourne or Sydney with Google Maps. That you had to take a plane instead of bus 156 to university is impressive enough on its own. You don't even need to bring up the honours (or lack thereof).

This is an elitist profession, grounded in theatrics and focused on outward appearances. It is not enough to say, "I am a lawyer" - it does not suffice the same way it does to say "I am a doctor" or "I am an engineer".

Where did you work? Where did you study? Chinatown firm, Australian uni.

It will be a long time before you make the kind of money your father did to be able to send you to uni, and even longer still before you dare boast to anyone that you are a lawyer.

tl;dr didn't graduate from Oxbridge, not asking about CC/BM/B4, don't engage in community spread of your mediocrity
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  #6095 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 12:42 PM
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Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
"Is it worth it to do x"

You want us to tell you that in spite of the ink spilled on the last 600+ pages, lawyering still is and will remain a path to, at the minimum, the upper middle class (the alternative being, of course, fantastical wealth).

You want us to tell you that the title "lawyer" still carries, in a superficial white-worshipping society that still clings to the neo-colonial structures it inherited, an elite and exclusive cachet to it.

You want us to tell you that being a lawyer will satisfy your parents and impress your Tinder hookups.

When you come back on summer and winter vacation, don't do the 2-week Big 4 gladhanding "I'm a rising third at Cambridge" so you can artificially boost your LinkedIn profile and take selfies with pretty high SES girls in tight bandage skirts with more UCAS points than IQ points for Instagram.

Go for internships at these Chinatown firms you named. See first hand what it's like to practise family and criminal law. Try and understand people who speak what you would hesitate to describe as English as you know it. In fact, try and talk to them. Understand that with your privileged, wealthy background, it will be some time before you actually comprehend why people live such different lives compared to you. You may never know why people don't just simply pay their fines or sell their houses. Surely people own more than one HDB, after all.

And above all, try and answer the question "Where are you studying?" as often as you can. Carefully study the reactions to your reply.

Know this: outside of the law, no one cares where you went to school, and the few that do probably can't find Melbourne or Sydney with Google Maps. That you had to take a plane instead of bus 156 to university is impressive enough on its own. You don't even need to bring up the honours (or lack thereof).

This is an elitist profession, grounded in theatrics and focused on outward appearances. It is not enough to say, "I am a lawyer" - it does not suffice the same way it does to say "I am a doctor" or "I am an engineer".

Where did you work? Where did you study? Chinatown firm, Australian uni.

It will be a long time before you make the kind of money your father did to be able to send you to uni, and even longer still before you dare boast to anyone that you are a lawyer.

tl;dr didn't graduate from Oxbridge, not asking about CC/BM/B4, don't engage in community spread of your mediocrity
The best reply I've read thus far. Thanks for this sobering perspective. God bless you.
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  #6096 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 12:55 PM
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Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
"Is it worth it to do x"

You want us to tell you that in spite of the ink spilled on the last 600+ pages, lawyering still is and will remain a path to, at the minimum, the upper middle class (the alternative being, of course, fantastical wealth).

You want us to tell you that the title "lawyer" still carries, in a superficial white-worshipping society that still clings to the neo-colonial structures it inherited, an elite and exclusive cachet to it.

You want us to tell you that being a lawyer will satisfy your parents and impress your Tinder hookups.

When you come back on summer and winter vacation, don't do the 2-week Big 4 gladhanding "I'm a rising third at Cambridge" so you can artificially boost your LinkedIn profile and take selfies with pretty high SES girls in tight bandage skirts with more UCAS points than IQ points for Instagram.

Go for internships at these Chinatown firms you named. See first hand what it's like to practise family and criminal law. Try and understand people who speak what you would hesitate to describe as English as you know it. In fact, try and talk to them. Understand that with your privileged, wealthy background, it will be some time before you actually comprehend why people live such different lives compared to you. You may never know why people don't just simply pay their fines or sell their houses. Surely people own more than one HDB, after all.

And above all, try and answer the question "Where are you studying?" as often as you can. Carefully study the reactions to your reply.

Know this: outside of the law, no one cares where you went to school, and the few that do probably can't find Melbourne or Sydney with Google Maps. That you had to take a plane instead of bus 156 to university is impressive enough on its own. You don't even need to bring up the honours (or lack thereof).

This is an elitist profession, grounded in theatrics and focused on outward appearances. It is not enough to say, "I am a lawyer" - it does not suffice the same way it does to say "I am a doctor" or "I am an engineer".

Where did you work? Where did you study? Chinatown firm, Australian uni.

It will be a long time before you make the kind of money your father did to be able to send you to uni, and even longer still before you dare boast to anyone that you are a lawyer.

tl;dr didn't graduate from Oxbridge, not asking about CC/BM/B4, don't engage in community spread of your mediocrity
tl;dr

10chars
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  #6097 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 12:56 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered View Post
"Is it worth it to do x"

You want us to tell you that in spite of the ink spilled on the last 600+ pages, lawyering still is and will remain a path to, at the minimum, the upper middle class (the alternative being, of course, fantastical wealth).

You want us to tell you that the title "lawyer" still carries, in a superficial white-worshipping society that still clings to the neo-colonial structures it inherited, an elite and exclusive cachet to it.

You want us to tell you that being a lawyer will satisfy your parents and impress your Tinder hookups.

When you come back on summer and winter vacation, don't do the 2-week Big 4 gladhanding "I'm a rising third at Cambridge" so you can artificially boost your LinkedIn profile and take selfies with pretty high SES girls in tight bandage skirts with more UCAS points than IQ points for Instagram.

Go for internships at these Chinatown firms you named. See first hand what it's like to practise family and criminal law. Try and understand people who speak what you would hesitate to describe as English as you know it. In fact, try and talk to them. Understand that with your privileged, wealthy background, it will be some time before you actually comprehend why people live such different lives compared to you. You may never know why people don't just simply pay their fines or sell their houses. Surely people own more than one HDB, after all.

And above all, try and answer the question "Where are you studying?" as often as you can. Carefully study the reactions to your reply.

Know this: outside of the law, no one cares where you went to school, and the few that do probably can't find Melbourne or Sydney with Google Maps. That you had to take a plane instead of bus 156 to university is impressive enough on its own. You don't even need to bring up the honours (or lack thereof).

This is an elitist profession, grounded in theatrics and focused on outward appearances. It is not enough to say, "I am a lawyer" - it does not suffice the same way it does to say "I am a doctor" or "I am an engineer".

Where did you work? Where did you study? Chinatown firm, Australian uni.

It will be a long time before you make the kind of money your father did to be able to send you to uni, and even longer still before you dare boast to anyone that you are a lawyer.

tl;dr didn't graduate from Oxbridge, not asking about CC/BM/B4, don't engage in community spread of your mediocrity
Hats off to your grandiloquent post... you’re really a lawyer. I really read till the end...
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  #6098 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 01:02 PM
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OP here.

I'm confused. Why look down on criminal/family lawyers? They provide a necessary service.

Also, I did an internship at a family law firm in Chinatown, and they already promised me a job if I do choose to study law. It's pretty much guaranteed. The partner is a friend of my father. He also knows plenty of other Chinatown lawyers who will take me, and apparently Singapore has a shortage of specialist criminal/family lawyers. Getting a job is not a problem.

I'm aware that the attrition rate is extremely high in this industry, so I'd rather not sacrifice so much of my time into law only to leave a few years down the road. The internship was fun, but that likely isn't an accurate reflection of what practicing is like. I left at 5pm everyday.
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  #6099 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 01:05 PM
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hahahaha. those are not real offers.
And you should intern at these family/criminal law firms before you say "i don't mind".
What are you implying?
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  #6100 (permalink)  
Old 12-06-2020, 01:05 PM
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I'm the OP who posted about being in AGC for the next 10 years to forever.

Depends on how long your stint is in AGC and whether you've diversified your skills while in AGC.

I have a friend who joined AGC (farmer) but spent his weekends and after hours writing and publishing academic pieces on tort, contract and employment law. So after 5 years with AGC, he was able to transition smoothly into a non-crim liti role with a big4 team (even then, not at the pqe he deserved tbh).

Other friends who've literally just done crim have not been so successful. Most of them had to settle for small and med law firms doing gen lit work.
I'm also interesting in publication opportunities - do you mind sharing what avenues there are for publication opportunities please? Thanks.
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