Saturday, May 3, 2008

What is the BAR Exam?

Have you ever wondered why Lawyers have to take something called a BAR exam? BAR is an acronym. in stands for BRITISH ACCREDITED REGENCY. The word "British" actually reffers to "The Crown". Which is NOT the Queen (or King), but rather the STATE; meaning the corporation that includes the BANKS. Accredited is simply "provided with official credentials, as by a government". The interesting word here is Regency. This term means "A person or group selected to govern in place of a monarch or other ruler who is absent, disabled, or still in minority."
So, in short, when a Lawyer passes the BAR exam, he or she is being granted the right to represent the Queen here in the states.
Look up lawyer in any legal dictionary and you will find that the lawyer's main objective is to represent the COURT (firstly) and THEN you.
The judge rules from the "bench". Bench originally came from the work BANK. The judge also is a regent of sorts, protecting the Crown. Words to consider: River BANK, Currency (current-sea), cash FLOW....

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