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Urban Law 101


               
2021 Jul 22, 10:12am   1,607 views  17 comments

by Eric_Holder   follow (0)  

I grew up in a suburb of a large northern city, and had no real contact with blacks until I became a lawyer. After I got my law degree I naïvely looked forward to a rewarding legal career. Little did I realize that 25 years later I would be a self-employed attorney doing domestic and civil litigation for a clientele that is overwhelmingly black.

I didn’t plan it that way. I just wanted to do a lot of work in the courtroom, and the best offer I got out of law school was with a small firm that specialized in bankruptcy. Most of its clients were black. Several years later, I set up an independent practice and many of my former clients came to me for domestic work.

Most people do not realize this, but outside the world of corporate or securities law, in any big city the legal profession is to a large degree fueled by the pathologies of blacks and other Third-World people. Of course, whites hire lawyers, but in any city, especially one with a good-sized black population, most of the people who need lawyers are black. In this respect, lawyers are like police officers or social workers — they rarely deal with ordinary white people.

To a large degree, I became racially conscious because of my black clients, who eventually destroyed all my preconceived notions about race. My awakening did not come from one or even a few incidents, but from the accumulation of thousands upon thousands of small interactions.

Day after day my clients continue to amaze me. There is no racial education quite so thorough and convincing as spending time with blacks, and my clients are far from being the poorest and least competent blacks. They are not indigent criminals for whom I am a court-appointed lawyer. They are people who can afford (or think they can afford) a lawyer to get a divorce, contest a custody judgment, beat a traffic ticket, etc. Some are government employees who make $60 to $70 thousand a year, yet even this group is vastly different from whites.


https://www.amren.com/archives/back-issues/september-2003/#cover

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1   Eric_Holder   @   2021 Jul 22, 10:16am  

For example, one of my black divorce clients tried to hide assets from his spouse — this is not uncommon. Through discovery it came to light that he had secretly bought a piece of property after the divorce had begun. He put his wife’s name on the title, a very odd thing to do, since he was trying to hide the property from her. I made the mistake of asking him why he did that. True to my previous experiences, he could not give an answer that made sense.
2   Eric_Holder   @   2021 Jul 22, 10:17am  

In my state, the parent who does not have custody — almost always the father — pays a percentage of net income to the parent with custody — almost always the mother. The mother gets 20 percent of the father’s net income for the first child, 25 percent for two children, and up to 50 percent for five or more children. What if a man has children by several women? Each mother gets 20 percent for the first child, so a man with five children by five different women is supposed to be paying 100 percent of his income in child support. I once had a client who had 12 different children by 10 different women. Theoretically, he owed 250 percent of his income. These laws simply don’t make sense for blacks. Judges have to decide each case as best they can.
3   Tenpoundbass   @   2021 Jul 22, 10:21am  

One of the most striking things about my black clients is the things they do not know. Many blacks, for example, do not know their own telephone numbers. They may think they do but they don’t, and the problem has gotten worse with the proliferation of cell phones. At least a third of the numbers they leave with my receptionist or on my answering machine are wrong numbers. Often, a potential client will call several times, each time leaving a variation of the same phone number. I keep calling until they get it right. At first I thought I was taking down the numbers incorrectly, but now I know better. With caller ID, it is clear when what the client says does not match the digital display.


I can confirm the Phone number issue. I have a whole family(I assume they are family members) that call me randomly asking to speak to "Tasha". They call me all hours of the day and night, for the last 5 years or more. Not the same person, a kid as young as ten, a guy in 20's and an older Woman all call me looking for Tasha. I keep telling them, "I'm sorry I think you have got the wrong number" I've even gone as far as pointing out, that they are probably trying to reach Tasha who may have the same phone number as me, but the area code is different. Perhaps you should try 765 instead of 954 Broward has two area codes.

When ever I'm bored and wondering why my family doesn't call, I can always count on a phone call from adopted black family looking for Tasha.

I told them one time, they call so much I feel like we're family. How is Tasha doing?
4   Eric_Holder   @   2021 Jul 22, 11:51am  

Tenpoundbass says
I told them one time, they call so much I feel like we're family. How is Tasha doing?


They don't know, because they can't reach her! You always answer her phone instead of her!
5   WookieMan   @   2021 Jul 22, 1:14pm  

Black culture changed when the US dumped manufacturing. 1960-70ish. Won't turn around in our lifetime either. They're retarded when it comes to credit. I witnessed it for a decade in Chicago. And yes, there are plenty of whites that suck with credit and finances too. As a percentage of the population though, blacks fail at it the most.

Doesn't get reported because facts have become racist. How about we announce reality and maybe actually try to help them out and not buy votes? Novel concept.
6   Ceffer   @   2021 Jul 22, 2:03pm  

Tenpoundbass says
I told them one time, they call so much I feel like we're family. How is Tasha doing?

This is white appropriation, you fiend. I bet you even asked Tasha's 'sex' assuming xe, xhe, xhit was a girl.
7   Ceffer   @   2021 Jul 22, 2:20pm  

Article was hilarious. Microscopically short term situational ethics with convenience improvisations and presumptions of mutual retardedness.

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