[blindLaw] limitation on blind attorneys

Sarah Badillo sbadillo100 at gmail.com
Mon Jul 27 12:55:07 UTC 2020


That’s true, but first, they never actually gave them the chance to see if
they could. Second, how many army lawyers actually serve in combat? How
many army lawyers have in the past served in combat? Also, in the future,
are they really going to put army lawyers in combat? Third, these days with
all of the push for equality, the one thing that people need to realize is
that equality is not there when it suits a person and eliminated when it
doesn’t. Equality is a quality for everyone whether or not someone agrees
with it. I think that as I said, there’s a whole opportunity that both the
prospective lawyer and the military misses out on.

On Mon, Jul 27, 2020 at 8:40 AM Cody Davis <cjdavis9193 at gmail.com> wrote:

> I considered this career path when I was in law school. I reached out to a
> recruiter explaining my situation and could not get a response. From what I
> have read online, even though you’re not in a combat position, all officers
> must be able to serve in a combat position if needed.
>
> I would have love to serve as a JAG officer if it were possible. Maybe
> permit it is a better word to use than possible.
>
> Warmly,
> Cody
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> > On Jul 27, 2020, at 8:28 AM, ---------- via BlindLaw <
> blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> >
> > Hello, I'm not sure if this is the correct forum for this but I have a
> question slash comment that in a way  pertains to attorneys. Over the past
> few years and months, many changes have taken place that forced society to
> re-examine its beliefs and actions regarding diversity and inclusion.  I
> believe the blind must also be equally included. While not all blind
> attorneys choose to take this path, some may wish, like there sighted
> colleagues, to join the jag core.  or in other words, become an army
> lawyer. While I'm not trying to glamorize this position, it may carry with
> it a range of benefits. The vast majority of what army lawyers do is
> lawyering like any other attorney. Since a lot of positions in the military
> are non combat positions, and the vast majority of army lawyers complete
> there 20 years of duty without major incidents, in this modern age of the
> year 2020, it shouldn't be unreasonable what with both accommodations and
> inclusion to expect and accept that many blind lawyers are just as capable
> of being army lawyers rather then civilian if they choose to. I  I
> commented on this in this list because this concerns  attorneys which is
> the topic of this list. All legal careers should be open to those who are
> blind or visually impaired. I have read that there is at least 1 in Israel.
> Finally, there is a wealth of attorneys who's knowledge and skill is being
> unused and who if they even wish to become this kind of attorney are being
> kept out. ∫ are simply my thoughts. The views are my own and do not reflect
> those of others.
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