You really don't know what lawyers do for a living, do you?GoldandSilverEagles wrote:1) Unlike many of the attorneys in here, Stevens is unwilling to bow down to the arrogance of a man or a woman costumed up in a black rob.
2) Unlike many of the attorneys in here, Stevens is unwilling to acknowledge them, or their title, as his "god".
You assume that all judges are arrogant, and you think that lawyers consider judges to be "god." This is typical of the extremism and hyperbole that characterizes tax deniers. Everything is either tyranny or freedom, corruption or virtue. Judges are either demons or gods.
A lawyer who thinks that judges are arrogant, corrupt idiots isn't going to do his client any good. And a lawyer who thinks that judges are infallible gods isn't going to do much good either. A good lawyer is able to remember that judges (and juries) are humans like the rest of us and is able to present his arguments and evidence so as to appeal to their reason and their sensibilities.
And part of persuasion is developing the confidence and respect of judges and juries. They're not going to respect someone who doesn't respect them, and they're not going to respect an obsequious toady, either.
It's called "realism," and it's something that you and Marc Stevens obviously don't understand.