Runnin’ through the field
Where all my tracks will be concealed
So how’s the weather where you are today?
At the 2 or 3 Lines World Headquarters campus, we’re up to our ass in snow. (Speaking of our ass, we’re freezing it off as well. )
As Charles Dudley Warner famously said, “Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.” (You probably thought that Mark Twain famously said that, but he didn’t – that quote came from Warner, who was a close friend of Twain.)
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My favorite weather-related quote comes from Oscar Wilde:
Conversation about the weather is the last refuge of the unimaginative.
True dat.
Here’s a really annoying quote about the weather from the 19th-century English polymath, John Ruskin:
Sunshine is delicious, rain is refreshing, wind braces us up, snow is exhilarating; there is really no such thing as bad weather, only different kinds of good weather.
I call bullsh*t on John Ruskin.
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I referred to Ruskin as a “polymath,” which is a term used to describe someone who is learned in many different fields. (“Renaissance man” is another term used to describe such a person.)
Ruskin was an influential art critic. But he also wrote on geology, mythology, crystallography, ornithology, and economics .
Ruskin was also a talented draftsman whose three-volume treatise, The Stones of Venice, contains detailed drawings of many Venetian structures. (Ruskin thought Venice’s architectural heritage was at risk, and wanted to preserve it – at least on paper.)
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| John Ruskin’s drawing of the Ducal Palace in Venice |
Ruskin was no fan of industrial capitalism, which he believed polluted not only the environment but also the soul. He championed many things that are now viewed as standard elements of the modern welfare state — like universal education, a minimum wage, and urban green spaces.
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Law students take classes covering a broad array of legal subjects.
But the explosive proliferation of laws and regulations over the past several decades have made it impossible for lawyers to be legal jacks of all trades. Just as most doctors focus on one part of the body, most attorneys limit their practice to one particular legal area – whether that’s corporate law, or patent law, or family law, or criminal law, or something else.
As lawyers get older, they often find themselves narrowing the breadth of their practice in order to deepen their knowledge of their speciality.
One of my law partners formulated a succinct description of how a lawyer’s practice tends to become increasingly specialized as time passed. “We learn more and more about less and less,” he used to say, “until we know almost everything about almost nothing.”
That’s it in a nutshell. A legal jack of all trades is almost certainly a master of none. Even John Ruskin would have to specialize if he were a 21st-century lawyer.
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“Snow (Hey Oh)” was the third single from the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ 2006 double album, Stadium Arcadium.
Stadium Arcadium was recorded at a Laurel Canyon house known as “The Mansion,” which was owned by record producer Rick Rubin.
The first album ever recorded at “The Mansion” was RHCP’s best record ever, Blood Sugar Sex Magik. Others who have recorded there include Jay-Z (“99 Problems”), LCD Soundsystem (“Drunk Girls”), and System of a Down (who recorded both the Mezmerize and Hypnotize albums there).
Click here to listen to “Snow (Hey Oh).”
Click here to buy “Snow (Hey Oh)” from Amazon.












