Patriotdiscussions wrote:Wow you are so smart, I wonder how anyone could keep up, you must really dazzle your peers. Where can I find some peer reviewed example of your incredible intelligence at? Surely a legal mind as great as yourself teaches or perhaps runs the biggest law firm in Chicago right?
Actually, one of my teachers and some of my friends back when I was a teenager called me a genius, but I believe they were stretching.
I haven't published any peer-reviewed articles in law reviews, but I have had about a dozen or so articles published on the subject of taxation.
I do dazzle my peers (other lawyers and CPAs with whom I work). I can tell sometimes that they're dazzled, by the way they respond to me. It's not a big deal. Smart people are a dime a dozen.
No, I don't teach college or law school, and no I don't run any law firms in Chicago. I've been there and I really like it, but it would be too cold for me in Chicago in the winter, anyway.
Surprised you did not try to educate me on sheperdizing as well.
I'm impressed that you know what it is. But, the correct spelling is "Shepardizing."
You do know that U.S. colleges put out more lawyers every year then ANY other field right? It really don't take a rocket scientist to do your job buddy.
A rocket scientist couldn't handle my job, and I certainly couldn't handle a rocket scientist's job.
Seriously, U.S. federal tax law is one of the most complex areas of law.
While I do think it is funny that you believe I have to go to college to read the same textbook you did....
Stop right there.
First of all, most of what American lawyers read is not in the form of a "textbook" in the sense in which you are thinking. Law school is not high school, and it's not college.
In American law schools, the "teaching" that goes on is (at least in my experience) what I would call "self-teaching." You don't read a "textbook" written by some legal expert, and for the most part you don't sit in class and listen to a professor pontificate about the law. Instead, you read the actual primary authorities -- mostly the verbatim texts of court opinions (they're re-printed in books called "casebooks," but these are not really "textbooks" in the sense that you would see in high school or college).
Second: In class, what the professor does is not so much to "lecture" as to ask a series of questions, calling upon students to respond. Especially in the first semester of law school, it seems to many new law students like a professor's game of "hide the ball."
Gradually, the law student's approach changes. Just as an Army or Marine Corps boot camp changes a person from being a civilian to being a soldier, law school changes the student.
Yes, to really understand law in the way that lawyers and judges do, you probably have to go to law school. Now, many great lawyers (such as Abraham Lincoln) in the old days learned without going to law school, but that's another topic.
I don't even feel the urge to tell you that my reading is at the very top son.
No, but your reading of LAW is nowhere near the top -- "son." That's obvious. That doesn't mean that you're not smart.
But I'm sure that by the 7th grade you were also reading 500 pages a day with an above college grade reading comprehension level as well correct?
Umm, you probably shouldn't have mentioned the 7th grade. According to my uncle, I was speaking in complete sentences at the age of one. When I was in second or third grade, I was reading on just about a 7th grade level -- according to the same uncle, who was teaching 7th grade and living with us at the time -- and at the time he showed me some essay papers written by his 7th grade students, just to find out how well I could read. Funny of you to make me think of that; I hadn't thought about that in many years. He passed away a few years ago.
When your done patting yourself on the back for thinking no one else could possible have access to the same public information then let me know....[snip childish rant]
I haven't patted myself on the back. And, it's not a question of access to public information. Yes, I do have certain materials you don't have, but it's not that you don't have
access to them -- you just might not be aware of their existence. The important thing is that you
do have access to statutes and cases -- you're aware of them and you read them, but you don't know how to analyze them. That's not because you're not smart -- it's because (in part) you don't have the training.
You need to understand your limitations. I have limitations, you have them, we all have them.
"My greatest fear is that the audience will beat me to the punch line." -- David Mamet