Quote:
Originally Posted by samantha thom
Red Tex,
Please do not generalize! I am in the business and I am nowhere near what you describe. I have a graduate degree, own a nice home and car. My parents are still married and they live in a very very nice home (not a trailer). And I have many talents and a great life outside of this. Men like you I always avoid. Men like you look at us women as low-class, piece of object that you can use/buy with your money. You don't respect us women as women. You say we are low-class but you continue to see us. What does that make you?
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And with that background, do you have tattoos? My guess in probably no. Inquiring minds want to know.
I'm not as strident as RedTex, but I do think that tattoos are much more acceptable in some circles than in others and some of that has to do with Socieconomic status. I deal with lots of laywers, mostly litigators from high dollar firms from out of state. You never seen tats on any of those folks, nor would I imagine that any of those firms would ever hire somebody for courtroom work that had any visible tattoo. Same with most of their legal assistants. But you get into the courtroom video technicians, and computer operators, etc., you see it more. Some of our litigation deals with lots of expert witnesses, most of whom have PhD or masters degrees. Again, you don't see any tats in that group. And that may be because those folks testify in court a lot, but I do think that if you took a group of 1,000 folks who had a JD, PhD, or MBA and compared it to a group of similar age that had a high school education, you'd see a lot more tats in the second group.