The operative philosophy that "…money will always be a vastly more far-reaching form of power than the command of ideas" explains the "enormous growth" of the number of lawyers in America in recent years, Klinkenborg asserts. The reader is "…invited, encouraged, to share McDeere's salacious glee as the perquisites of his new profession are heaped upon him," Klinkenborg writes (36).
McDeere receives "…an eel-skin attache, a BMW [in the film it's a Mercedes], a new wardrobe, a low-interest mortgage, [and] the annulment of student loans," Klinkenborg writes (36). All of this "titillation" is part of the legal "culture" (36) the writer continues, and it is part of the "corporate lawyer's surrender to the ethic of bare-knuckled capitalism" (32). But in the case of McDeere, should he have been suspicious of the aggressive way in which his suitors at Bendini, Lambert & Locke recruited him? Was it sufficiently unusual for McDeere to be offered $80,000 (and all those perks) in 1991 that he should have questioned the veracity of his prospective employers? Responding to an emailed question for this research paper, (July 10, 2009), UCLA Law Professor Asimow replied:
"I don't think a new attorney would be suspicious of a high offer he receives, especially if he did well at law school in the areas the firm specializes in. Historically, top law students from top law schools get very handsome offers and are highly sought after by firms."
Conclusion
In his essay, "Bad...
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