Yep - zero.Actually, I'm fairly sure your bar membership rules dictate the number of pro bono hours you need to do as a member of the bar, doesnt it?
Yep - zero.Actually, I'm fairly sure your bar membership rules dictate the number of pro bono hours you need to do as a member of the bar, doesnt it?
Yep - zero.
BE IT RESOLVED, that each Texas attorney should aspire to render at least 50 hours of legal
services to the poor each year, or make an equivalent financial contribution to an organization that
provides direct legal services to the poor. Legal services and support to the poor include the following:
"Should aspire" does not equal dictate. I have no requirement to report pro bono hours and it is not a requirement for me to keep my license to perform even a single second of pro bono service.
Every lawyer, regardless of professional prominence or professional workload, should find time to participate in or otherwise support the provision of legal services to the disadvantaged. The provision of free legal services to those unable to pay reasonable fees is a moral obligation of each lawyer as well as the profession generally. A lawyer may discharge this basic responsibility by providing public interest legal services without fee, or at a substantially reduced fee, in one or more of the following areas: poverty law, civil rights law, public rights law, charitable organization representation, the administration of justice, and by financial support for organizations that provide
legal services to persons of limited means.
I never said it dictated that you had to do it. But the rule is there for a reason. If you dont want to perform pro bono services to the poor thats between you and the Texas bar. But the bar there does recommend that its members do 50 hours annually to give back to citizens of the state....not zero.
Just makes sense when the bar puts it this way:
Actually, I'm fairly sure your bar membership rules dictate the number of pro bono hours you need to do as a member of the bar, doesnt it?
I think something's off here?
Actually, I'm fairly sure your bar membership rules dictate the number of pro bono hours you need to do as a member of the bar, doesnt it?
I never said it dictated that you had to do it. But the rule is there for a reason. If you dont want to perform pro bono services to the poor thats between you and the Texas bar. But the bar there does recommend that its members do 50 hours annually to give back to citizens of the state....not zero.
Just makes sense when the bar puts it this way:
Yeah, it is confusing. In this neck of the woods "mentions" and "dictates" are not synonymous.The bar assocation does 'dictate' (i.e. mentions) the number of hours its members should do each year. I never said it 'forced' them to do it.
If I parsed that in a confusing way i'm sorry. But my clarification should help.
Not true. Everything else is expendable. Lose a limb, lose an eye. Lose a lung. Brain keeps on going. Lose some of your heart tissue, your brain keeps going. Which is exactly what happens if you have a heart attack, by the way--oxygen starvation causes a piece of your heart to actually die. The rest of your heart keeps pumping.Without the body, or any number of its pieces, the brain dies...
So the Apple campus is now a mess?Endpoint of the analogy: the leader is the most important part of an organization. Without the figurative brain, the figurative body is merely a disorganized mob of people who, being both disorganized and a mob, cannot accomplish anything except breaking store windows and flipping cars on their backsides.
The bar assocation does 'dictate' (i.e. mentions) the number of hours its members should do each year. I never said it 'forced' them to do it.
If I parsed that in a confusing way i'm sorry. But my clarification should help.
True, but when you donate time instead, at least you know very quickly if it's being used properly.
Management skills (read: executives) are quite important for large charities. There are only so many people with the skills necessary to run something as large as UNICEF or the Red Cross, and most of those people would prefer to go into corporations or private business where returns are much higher.
Endpoint of the analogy: the leader is the most important part of an organization. Without the figurative brain, the figurative body is merely a disorganized mob of people who, being both disorganized and a mob, cannot accomplish anything except breaking store windows and flipping cars on their backsides.
Not true. Everything else is expendable. Lose a limb, lose an eye. Lose a lung.
Lose some of your heart tissue, your brain keeps going.
Anyone who thinks that 100% of your money will go out, are deluding themselves. You have too look at the overall scheme of things and the percentage of funds that go out and then what good they actually do.
Returns above anything else? You really think that is the most adequate mindframe for people running a charity?
The logic of corporate executives is - these days, at least, and that's a loss for everyone - oriented towards making profit, accumulating money and increasing the size of the little empires they control. Whereas a charity is supposed to be about not making a return. It's about giving stuff away, at a loss! Put that kind of executive running them, and you'll have very "efficient" charities, only efficient at perpetuating the charity and the power of the executives running them. The charity mission? They'll be just a means towards that power. The people to be aided? Tools.
No, sorry but corporate executives do not seem adequate for running charities.
The Laws of Evolution (as applied to economics) have already spent six thousand years of recorded history proving that wrong. Good leaders cannot be replaced by anybody except a better leader. History is full of incidents where good leaders were removed from their posts, after which the organization from which they were removed, promptly failed.No, it's not. I do not share your cult of heroic leaders. I do not fall for that myth. Leaders must be replaceable, and if someones builds an organization where the leader is not replaceable, that organization is doomed.
You lost the argument the instant you wrote that. The argument "Anybody who disagrees with X is a fool" is never acceptable in a debate.Only fools would meekly accept any other social contract