So, the George Mason School of Law wanted to brown-nose the judiciary a little bit (well, not a little bit), and to rename itself from the name of one of the founding fathers to the name of the "hunting trip crook" Antonin Scalia, a U.S. Supreme Court justice who considered that an innocent person may be "legally" executed, and who gave court victories to who greases his hand better.
The renaming was to - "Antonin Scalia School of Law". That's right.
ASSLaw.
According to the school, that tries now to hastily re-name ASSLaw, the new name "caused some acronym controversy on social media".
Calling a school of law ASSLaw (or #ASSoL, which sounds no better), in a brown-nosing effort to commemorate the memory of a judge, is called "some acronym controversy".
Somebody has a sense of humor in that law school.
When you are trying hard to be the first to brown-nose the best way, you do not notice common-sense things - like the possible "acronym controversy" coming.
Isn't it poetic justice that the #ASSoL #AntoninScalia is called who he is - in the name of a law school no less.
There is reportedly a petition by the Virginia lawmaker circulating asking the school not to rename itself after the "controversial and polarizing" judge #AntoninScalia.
I, on the opposite, now support the renaming to be left in its first inspirational brown-nosing glory.
Please, do rename the school into #ASSLaw - it will be the symbol of the establishment of the legal profession, all of its core qualities at its very best.
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