Personal Moral Code of Professional Conduct
As all honest attorneys know, the professional codes of conduct enforced by state bars have nothing to do with moral concerns but only serve two purposes: a) to provide a basis for disbarment or other sanctions against any attorney challenging the accepted or politically correct paradigm for the judicial system; b) to assure that the wealthy or politically powerful attorneys', in particular the large wealthy law firms', method of practice designed to maximize billable hours and paperwork is the accepted paradigm for the practice of law. Thus, an honest attorney concerned with maintaining a sense of justice, fairness, and equity as a person and as an attorney needs to develop his own moral code, unless of course he's really a she, in which case he's got bigger problems to worry about. (Obviously, political correctness is not one of the facets of my personal moral code.)
You see this premise in the celebrity world, with Tom Cruise becoming a Scientologist (not to be confused with Anthropologists who are people who develop similar cosmological theories only theirs is based upon the firm rational basis of a petite fragment of skull bone of unknown origin) and Madonna adopting the kabala, lala, kabola, bona, kabbalah, whatever, moral code (among other things).You look at this and think to yourself, those Scientology guys got quite a racket going, don't they? Then you think to yourself what makes them so much better than me that they can adopt a new moral code and I cannot? Heck, I can make things up just as good or better than they can, can't I?
Then you look at your watch and notice that its time for lunch. But when you're done with lunch, you decide to start looking for a new moral code, but where in the heck are you going to find yourself a new moral code at this time of day? So of course, since you are at work, you look on Ebay but give up after spending all your money buying vintage ABBA records; then after work you drop by Walmart where, surprisingly, or not surprisingly, you find that they have no moral code.
Well, look no further, because I can, free of charge, provide you with the steps of creating your own moral code. Feel free to use it, its yours, forget about me, I'll be OK, I like standing outside in the cold, no more food for me since I am not charging for my legal work.
All you need to do is follow these 10 easy steps. There were 25 of them, but then I said to myself (a habit I need to break), "If you're going to have 25, why not keep going and include all the steps of Division I? Or better yet, why not institute a playoff system and be done with it? Having 25 sort of diminishes the accomplishments of the Top Ten, doesn't it? I mean, Boise State was undefeated this year. If they could beat Oklahoma, who's to say they couldn't have won it all? Ohio State turned out to be not that great, didn't they?"
OK, back to the steps:
- Be creative. If you love penguins, then worship penguins. Send them a card, write them a poem, put them on a pedestal... heck, it might be the first time they get to look over your head. Nothing's sacred (at least not until it becomes a part of your moral code, in which case it does become sacred).
- Don't be afraid to ask for money. Churches don't build themselves after all.
- Exercise. Because it's good for you.
- Attend as many Happy Hours as you can, because that's the best way to pick up... followers. It's the beer goggle syndrome, any moral code looks good with a few quarter (quarter, who am I kidding, they are dollar beers these days! "Yeah, I'll buy you a bucket of Buds, if you let me keep the bucket!") beers in you.
- Bet on sports, because it keeps things in perspective. Just don't bet on moral codes, or you'll never make it into the Moral Code Hall of Fame.
- Exercise, because it's good for you.
- Don't "put up or shut up". I say "put up" and "shut up", just to be different. And because you'll be shutting up, no one will know that you are putting up, so it will be our own dirty little "secret".
- Stop putting stuff in "quotations", it gets annoying after awhile.
- Make Valentino Rossi one of your saints. Just because you can.
- And finally, forget about holy water, incense, and fasting, they aren't healthy. Be easy on yourself. Make smoothies a required drink, allow Icons consisting only of NFL cheerleaders, perfume is allowed at services only if it is still on the woman, or better yet, require perfume to be allowed at services only if still on Jennifer Anniston. She'd make a better god than a penguin would.
