Should I pursue becoming a lawyer?
That depends do you find studying the law and learning to manipulate it interesting bc if you answered yes than I have good news for you
>>17765956
this. im doing law part time and i personally hate it but its a great career if you find it interesting. Law requires a lot of studying if you actually want to get good grades, and reading law is extremely tedious. im doing criminology with law at university, its 75% crim, 25% law. though i dislike law, i go to quite an average uni so i can bull shit it with out much studying.
>>17765956
I love studying law and I'd imagine I'd love practicing it too, but as far as I know being a lawyer is more than just that.
Things I don't think I'l handle or like in the slightest are
-The fucktons of paperwork
-Corruption
-The chance that I'l starve due to not having cases/clients
>>17765975
You will not starve in the modern world you literally have to actively fuck yourself over to starve if this is your passion pursue it ppl everywhere need lawyers and most ppl are too lazy to do the schooling so you'll get a job even if it's not top tier right away live your dream you won't regret it
>>17765947
Do you want money and power?
Accounting major senior here. So I'm kinda related to law stuff. I'd suggest thinking about doing accounting in your undergrad. It's more practical and a lot of classes in accounting base rules off laws. So you'll get practical education and if you like the law aspects behind it you could pursue it later in life. Or you could just sample a law course in community college. Real law though, like business law or constitutional case classes. Stuff that is foundational and is found in everyday use like contract laws between states/countries.
>>17765947
No.