Imports/Exports/Retorts
International Trade Law is one of my favourite courses this term, I suppose because I appreciate the economics angle of it, and I've always thought importer/exporter to be the best-sounding non-descript job title. It's also a great class for exchanges like these:
Professor: So, imagine that the International Trade Commission has just upheld an anti-dumping duty levied on your client's exports from Canada. He comes to your office to find out what he can do. Now what do you tell your client?
Class: (silence)
Professor: C'mon, you're getting paid $400 an hour. You can't just sit there.
Class: (just sits there)
Professor: It's now down to $300 an hour.
There was a lot more silence before our prof gave us the simple answer (appeal!), so I can only assume the class was waiting out the hour to make $600.
3 comments:
I thought 'appeal' or 'objection' were the first two words a lawyer learned? Surely some sort of base instinct must take over in situations like these?
B
Ugh...international trade is KILLING me right now.
Fair enough, but what other class deals with "unscrupulous lobster dealers"?
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