Omnidragon said:
I don't know... I think a lot of commercial lawyers I've seen in real life are pretty unethical: whether it'd be ones that our business has engaged with or against.
Care to elaborate on the ethical rules you are claiming have been broken? Would you be so kind as to direct me to one of the professional rules and provide some evidence for this claim - or at least explain it in some detail??
Just because
you may not like how something has been done or how someone has behaved does not make that behavious unethical.
Omnidragon said:
And then... I find some of the kids of certain QCs at law faculty to be very arrogant. I can just see their unscrupulous behaviours when daddy gives them the grad job.
Mere speculation. And how, pray, would their daddies be able to give them grad jobs? The barristers' rules (NSW Barristers' Rule 81) require that barristers operate in solo practice meaning that they must not employ "any legal practitioner who acts as a legal practitioner in the course of that employment" (rule 81(b)). So, even if daddy QC gave these kids jobs they would could only ever be to do paralegal/secretarial services - which would rather defeat the purpose of spending all those $000s on a bachelor's degree ...
Omnidragon said:
Did you guys hear about the two legal secretaries fighting over some lunch at AAR in Sydney... gee I think that said a bit about the ethical standards of professional peolpe.
Ah ... actually, NO. A petty office fight over lunch is not an issue of ethics (even if it did concern lawyers - which in this case it did not, as you conceed your example delas with legal secretaries) but rather it is nothing more than a juvinile office bithching session the likes of which one can find in any office around the counrty. It may not be nice to call people names as those women did, it may contravene accepted norms of office civility, but I do not think it rises to the serious level of a serious breech of ethics.