And for all that, rather than being venerated as the saints we so obviously are (at least if you accept the above arguments), the legal profession is widely regarded by society as a bunch of self-serving sharks and shysters who are only looking out for themselves. At any gathering of folk, the slightest suggestion a lawyer’s calling involves any degree of altruistic intent brings out looks of incredulity and sidesplitting guffaws.
Of course, this is despite all the practical evidence that indicates self-interest is not the motivating factor for the practice of law. The system just would not work, at all, if the legal profession served itself before it served its clients or the law. But then, the truth never was a good story. I suppose it is arguable that it doesn’t work, at least not in the ideal fashion. It does not help that our brothers and sisters in the profession do little to help themselves.
The adversarial nature of our profession leads to constant conflict in the life of a lawyer. Conflict with one’s partners, clients, opposition, judges, bureaucracy; the list goes on. Our training forces us to dissect what has been told to us, to establish the veracity of any facts, take an opposing point of view to test an opinion, and in a very Socratic way, to get ultimately to the truth. Indeed, the legal system and Courts in particular serve to determine, the, or an, objective truth of things. At least to the extent that is at all possible,
Of course, the rest of the world (outside science perhaps) does not operate that way. For the rest of the world, getting on with its life, the truth is subjective, and perception is the only reality. And reality can change. It is malleable for folks in the real word. Whether that is a good thing or bad is not something we need to concern ourselves with here. It just is.
A profession trained in, and accustomed to, constant conflict and the dissection of language to get to the truth of matters is bound to be feared or loathed by those without that training and knowledge. Lawyers stand divorced from those we serve by how we are trained to look at the world. The good lawyers, the ones with sufficient self-awareness and self-confidence, can work in both worlds. They are capable of transition between the fluid reality of perception and everyday life and the concrete rules of the law. They are rare, for we are all too human.
And, despite the overwhelming need for solid self-confidence that is demanded by the profession, I suspect it attracts an awful lot of folk who are anything but confident or self-aware. They cling, like a limpet to a rock, to the certainty that is offered by the profession, practice and the law. “But that’s the law’, ‘they’re the rules’, common refrains, like some holy writ. As though the law is the only truth and without it we’d be washed away by the ocean of perception and uncertainty.
Dogmatism rarely goes down well with those less informed about the rules, particularly if the rules enable one particular group to have, in appearances at least, a degree of power over or greater than the rest. And it is no surprise it suits others, with competing power and influence (government, media, etc.), to paint lawyers with a bad brush.
The simple truth is people fear what they don’t understand. And, in the main, they do not understand the law. Or how it is used. Jo Public may be able to access the laws more so than ever before, but just because he can read does not mean he can understand.
One would think that as paid communicators and advocates, the profession would do a better job at educating the public it serves as to its benefits. For a profession made up largely of people lacking in self-confidence (appearances are not to be believed) it doesn’t do a lot to ensure its members are liked. This may stem from the innate lack of confidence and resultant fear that if the public is educated there’d be no real need to do the job. Is the profession really that weak that it cannot take strength in the true value of what it does?
The professions’ strength, that is derived from honouring its obligations to others, is also its greatest weakness. Self-promotion in a profession where you’re only as good as your last case, the evidence and varying degrees of luck tend to get short shrift. Combine that with a constant state of conflict among your peers, no matter how collegiate, and you very effectively muzzle any attempts by the profession as a whole to advance its cause. Hard to tell the world what you’re doing for it when you’re too busy fighting among yourselves, or secretly too scared to pin your colours to the mast where they can be easily torn down.
The irony is all too bitter.
And of course, maybe I’m wrong. Wouldn’t be the first time. Maybe self-interest is the true motivation for lawyers. After all, why should they be any different to the rest of society? Perhaps all this talk of altruism and fiduciary duty is just a cleverly designed system of words and bureaucracy designed by the lawyers themselves to disguise their self-interest with the thin veneer of respectability.
That too would explain why the profession is generally treated with such poor regard. The hypocrisy is galling I guess. Pretending to be nobly placing your interests behind those of the client, just so he can’t see your hands in his pockets. A gross breach of trust drowned out by the furore of proclamations and protestations as to the very trust being abused.