Guest Post
Deb O'Connor
LAWYERS: FORCE FOR GOOD OR EVIL?
First off, let's be clear that I am not a lawyer, but I worked in a legal environment long enough to have an informed, but informal opinion, of the genre. Second, the lawyers I came to know and respect worked for Legal Aid in the clinic system, so they have made a choice to work exclusively for the disadvantaged. While I don't know it for a fact, I suspect these are a different breed than the Bay Street shark variety.
But one thing most lawyers have in common is their adherence to the Law, and to their Rules of Professional Conduct. Make no mistake, lawyers are a distinct sub-set of the human species, and their peculiarities set them apart from the rest of us. When they rattle on about Conflict of Interest and other legalities that make little sense to mere humans, they really mean it! Nothing matters more, in fact, and the only thing they fear is the Law Society of Upper Canada, which wields a big stick.
They understand there can be a huge difference between Justice and Law, the former being what society aspires to, and the latter what we actually have. No amount of teeth grinding or wishful thinking can make the two the same, although as laws change, the line is always blurred. Those lawyers unwilling to accept that, or simply wanting to change it, often enter politics where our laws originate.
Lawyers don't generally see their clients as people; they just represent whatever legal issue they are pursuing. Lawyer wear blinders in that regard; they are only interested in the facts of the issue and how to prevail, not in the client's personal life problems. What can sometimes seem like coldness and disinterest is simply a focused lawyer doing their job, which they clearly see as solving the legal problem in front of them.
What lawyers often have, in my experience, is a wicked sense of humour. Not generally shared among outsiders, it's their own personal safety valve to stave off the effects of work stress. Believe it or not, lawyers can be a veritable barrel of fun given the right occasion and enough good scotch.
But would you want a lawyer in your own family? They can also be royal pains in the butt, especially when they insist on pointing out the Law and its ramifications. And, they stubbornly refuse to give legal advice in areas of the law they don't practise, so your real estate lawyer cousin will not provide advice on your divorce no matter how many times you ask.
Good or evil? Depends on who you ask, and who the lawyer is! But even if you hate the breed, most of us can agree anarchy is not a reasonable alternative, and that's what we would have without the Law and lawyers to navigate them.

