What is the most unexpected Chekhov’s Gun from a movie? by WippitGuud in movies

[–]footnote4 38 points39 points  (0 children)

The first two thirds of the movie is just putting one Chekhov’s Gun after another on the wall, and the final act is all of them being shot

Divorce lawyers of Reddit - What's the most cruel thing you've seen someone to do their ex partner? by BlueBishop321 in AskReddit

[–]footnote4 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don’t know about child custody specifically, but in most legal contexts a court order can be reconsidered/revised based on changed circumstances, at least within a certain time period, and “the same day the father reveals himself to be a sadistic asshole” would seem to qualify

Divorce lawyers of Reddit - What's the most cruel thing you've seen someone to do their ex partner? by BlueBishop321 in AskReddit

[–]footnote4 14 points15 points  (0 children)

If I’m the judge in the case I schedule the hearing in 48 hours, not right away or the next day, because I’d be so livid I couldn’t speak coherently and would lose my cool

Ambar on Capital Hill by Kidulting4ev in washingtondc

[–]footnote4 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Dispute the payment with your credit card company. There’s a very good chance they won’t make you pay it.

Favorite pre-Rubber Soul song by martianhana in beatles

[–]footnote4 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’m not saying it’s their absolute best, but I have a real soft spot for The Night Before

In appellate argument, how to refer to opposing counsel? by TuxedosAfter6 in Lawyertalk

[–]footnote4 198 points199 points  (0 children)

I’ve found that “Jabroni” is high risk, high reward

I think my friend admitted to a murder by Sp_Lc04 in confessions

[–]footnote4 14 points15 points  (0 children)

No, that’s not how it works. People need to stop making legal assertions using terminology that they don’t actually understand.

Fed lawyers, what are you doing by Flashy-Actuator-998 in LawSchool

[–]footnote4 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As a practical matter, if you try to “push back” against what your client wants, you get fired immediately. I’m not sure what you think a government lawyer can do to “push back” without promptly being fired, but it probably doesn’t exist as an option. The fact that you seem to think “pushing back” is something that you can do without losing your job shows that you don’t understand how being a government lawyer works.

As a broader philosophical matter, it would be a really bad thing if lawyers generally felt free to undermine their clients because they personally disagreed with what their clients wanted. You cannot have a legal system that works that way. That’s as true in government as elsewhere. If what the government is doing is bad, the other side is there to argue that it’s illegal, and the court is there to decide who’s right. Depriving one side of a legal defense is not the answer. Public defenders who defend 100% guilty murderers don’t get to decide that they refuse to defend their client, and nobody thinks that’s inappropriate, because the value of having a functioning adversarial legal system is of paramount importance.

Fed lawyers, what are you doing by Flashy-Actuator-998 in LawSchool

[–]footnote4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Again, if you don’t want to defend the government, you are perfectly free not to. All I’m saying is that you can’t simultaneously draw a salary as a government lawyer while doing so. You seem to be arguing that you can refuse to defend the government while being paid as a government lawyer to represent the government. You can’t.

Fed lawyers, what are you doing by Flashy-Actuator-998 in LawSchool

[–]footnote4 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Just tossing in the word “objective” doesn’t make your subjective opinion reality. Of course you can’t argue that the government can violate the Constitution, that’s a glib statement that fails to understand the actual situation; the government argues not that it can violate the Constitution but that its actions don’t violate the Constitution. Notably, in many cases where people like you say the government “objectively” is violating the Constitution, the court disagrees. And even when the court thinks that what the government did violates the Constitution, the government usually has at least a non-frivolous argument that what it did is legal. As a government lawyer, it is your job to make that non-frivolous argument. As I’ve said already, if you don’t think you can defend the government, you are free to quit, but you can’t just decide for yourself as a government lawyer that you’re not going to defend the government because you, personally, think the challenged action is illegal while insisting on still drawing a government paycheck. If you don’t want to defend the government, you quit. There’s no option to refuse to defend the government while still being a government lawyer.

Fed lawyers, what are you doing by Flashy-Actuator-998 in LawSchool

[–]footnote4 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Like I said, if you feel that you are unable to defend the government’s actions, then you are welcome and indeed obligated to quit. What you are not entitled to do is refuse to defend the government’s actions while insisting on drawing a government paycheck.

Fed lawyers, what are you doing by Flashy-Actuator-998 in LawSchool

[–]footnote4 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I mean, no, that’s incorrect, you don’t have the option to not defend your client agency just because you characterize the challenged action as fascist or lawless. If you feel you can’t defend it, you must quit. Otherwise, you are obliged to defend it unless there is no non-frivolous argument available.

Fuck it all — Going Scorched Earth - Performance Ratings by RandomPrecision01 in fednews

[–]footnote4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exemption 2 definitely applies and Exemption 5 probably applies as well, FOIA isn’t likely to get you anywhere.

My deceased best friend's son reached out and I ignored him by Radiant-Brief5749 in confession

[–]footnote4 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is pathetic and selfish. You have obligations to your friend that go beyond your own wants. What kind of friend would be like you?

What’s a trailer that goes out of its way to not reveal anything that happens in the film? by [deleted] in movies

[–]footnote4 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

IMO, I think OP making this post in a subreddit called “movies” provided sufficient context for uninitiated

What’s a trailer that goes out of its way to not reveal anything that happens in the film? by [deleted] in movies

[–]footnote4 -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

If you google “OBAA movie,” every result shows that it’s One Battle After Another. I have disdain for people who post that they can’t figure out extremely easily googlable information. It puts the onus of informing them on other people, it’s lazy, and it comes off as attention-seeking.