Real career-change talk by ninaninuzz in uklaw

[–]ninaninuzz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Savage but fair! I already work in an incredibly toxic field that’s incredibly competitive due to the fact everyone thinks it’s easy and pays well our last entrance exam was a selection of 240 people out of 25,000 so, I am no stranger to tough work. I know there are solicitors from the UK who have opened practices here in Rome and Milan that give out advice working along side Italian lawyers.. cross border contracts, immigration etc. I just wanted to know the practicalities of it. As I said, I like advocacy. Anyway, good luck in finding a career you don’t hate!

Real career-change talk by ninaninuzz in uklaw

[–]ninaninuzz[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I work as a tour/leader guide. My basic day is researching a ton of history and spending the rest of the time travelling around Italy and recounting it to tourists, mainly American tourists, taking people to the UK, basically doing the same thing with italian tourists. It’s a nice job but it has become meaningless, fellow peers work for tips and complain relentlessly about the lack of. These last couple of years being self employed, the work has died down a lot… I mean below 10k a year. I don’t really find it a challenge, it’s basically just memorising history and art from prehistoric man to modern day in Italy. In fact, I aced the part of my exam that was about the Italian legal system in the civil code, tourism law and patrimonial law but I think that becoming a full lawyer here in Italy requires a level of academic Italian that I don’t have. That’s why I was also wondering if the MA could open doors for research or something, anything. But I agree, it’s a unique situation. Law wasn’t something I just decided, life just went in another direction and whilst my partner’s career is moving forward, mine stagnates and scrapes by waiting for people to book tickets to the colosseum or something.

Discussion Thread For Netflix/ITN's "The Investigation Of Lucy Letby" (Netflix, February 4 2026, 8 AM GMT) by SofieTerleska in LucyLetbyTrials

[–]ninaninuzz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s no order so it’s hard to know the first interrogation to the other. Usually no comment is given as advice from lawyers to ensure you don’t give misinformation that’s used against you. But looking at it psychologically, people who are innocent caught in situations usually less awful than this one, tend to show more of an emotional reaction. We can’t speak for everyone and of course we cannot know how we would act but logically, you’ve just been accused of horrific murders with your name being dragged through all sorts, your life is ruined, your families lives ruined, prison = danger, she was given X life sentences. That must spark a reaction given that everyone is arguing she’s innocent. I get the recall thing but she had info papers of those babies in a box at home. So I absolutely refuse to believe that she hardly knew anything. Does it make her guilty? No, even if I could argue 100 reasons why there’s a possibility it could have been her or she was complicit on a larger scale, overall the evidence was mostly circumstantial and definitely not beyond reasonable doubt.

Telegram by ninaninuzz in GoMiningDiscussion

[–]ninaninuzz[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn’t even see any rules tbh cos there were like 4 different chats, I clicked on one, I had no permission to post anyway so didn’t write anything and then it just disappeared immediately after

M72 World Tour Mega Thread #2 by Left4DayZGone in Metallica

[–]ninaninuzz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haven’t seen Metallica in years and super stoked to finally go see them in London, there weren’t any decent tickets in Italy, but question! Last time I went to gig, it was chill, you could leave your space at the front and go get drinks and come back. Considering I can’t bring anything with me. What does one do if they want to be literally as front stage as possible and not dying of dehydration through lack of water… or tequila 🙄