“I've been a military lawyer for 33 years. A member of al Qaeda or their affiliate group can be detained under a law of war as long as their threat to our nation without a trial.” YearsLongWarLawNationsGroupsMilitaryMembersThreatLawyerTrialsAlsAl Qaeda Author:Lindsey Graham
“Well it's been about 100 years and every attempt at a comics writers' union has failed miserably. There is, sadly, a long history of short-term thinking and self-destructive behavior among my fellow comic book creators. No matter how many horror stories they have heard they won't even go so far as to hire themselves a lawyer when they need it. It breaks my heart. I am a very proud union member of the Writers Guild. And I can't imagine my fellow comic creators being able to pull something like this together.” ThinkingNeedsYearsWellsHeartLongI CanBookSelfMatterStoriesAbleTogetherTermBreakImagineHeardProudMy HeartHorrorMembersBehaviorFellowsUnionsCreatorLawyerComicDestructiveComic BookShort TermSelf DestructiveBreaking My HeartHorror StoriesGuildsSelf Destructive BehaviorDestructive BehaviorShort Term Thinking Author:Brian Michael Bendis
“My family is all lawyers. Most people when they come on shows like this, "I'm proud of the first member of my family to get a college education."” PeopleFirstsShowsCollegeProudMembersMy FamilyLawyerCollege Education Author:Rush Limbaugh
“It is a privilege to be recognized by FDLA. I am a staunch believer that as a member of the Bar, we have the great privilege to represent clients in all facets of our practice, and that includes making the commitment to represent clients for whom access to representation and ultimately justice is limited by economics. As all of the “20 for 20 honorees have done, stepping up to meet that commitment is at the heart of what it means to be a lawyer. I hope the inspiring stories and contributions of my fellow honorees will shine a bright light on FDLA and this most important mission.” HeartMeanImportantDoneStoriesLightJusticePracticeMembersCommitmentEconomicsFellowsShiningPrivilegeMissionsLawyerAccessBelieverBarsContributionClientsRepresentationFacetsBright LightsInspiring Stories Author:Terrence J
“I may have been prejudiced against lawyer members of Congress, having run against one or two and having been threatened politically by a few others, and also because my own professional background was academic, principally in the liberal arts. Good lawyers, I asserted in campaigns, can be found in the yellow pages of the telephone books. Good historians, or political and social philosophers, are not so easily found or classified.” MayHas BeensArtTwoBookRunningPoliticalFoundSocialMy OwnMembersPagesCongressPhilosopherLawyerCampaignsBackgroundsHistorianYellowAcademicThreatenedTelephonesLiberal ArtsGood Lawyer Book:Up'til Now: A Memoria Source: Up'til Now: A Memoria
“I have been shaped by the experiences of the people who are closest to me, by the things I've learned from [my wife] Martha, by my hopes and my concerns for my children, Philip and Laura, by the experiences of members of my family, who are getting older, by my sister's experiences as a trial lawyer in a profession that has traditionally been dominated by men.” PeopleMenChildrenHas BeensWifeMembersConcernMy FamilyMy WifeProfessionLawyerTrialsMy ChildrenI've LearnedMy SisterClosestGetting OldGetting OlderPhilipThings I've LearnedLauraTrial Lawyers Author:Samuel Alito
“There's a black lawyer in Galveston, Texas, who was the unpaid NAACP general counsel in Texas. He had a great record in housing discrimination, labor discrimination. He decided to take as a client a member of the Ku Klux Klan because the state wanted to get the membership lists of the Klan to find out if they could get something on the Klan. And he said, `I got to take you. I despise you. But we, the NAACP, won that case; NAACP vs. Alabama in the 1950s. Nobody has the right to get your membership lists.' He was fired from the NAACP. To me, he's a hero.” IfsSaidStatesWantedBlackCasesRecordsHeroMembersLaborDecidedLawyerListsDiscriminationTexasDespiseClientsHousingAlabamaMembershipKu Klux KlanNaacp Author:Nat Hentoff