Throughout my time at Mississippi State and into my first year of law school, I have been actively engaged in state and federal political life in Tennessee and Mississippi. This hasn't been passive. I've been in the room — at campaign events for major statewide and federal candidates, in direct conversation with elected officials, watching firsthand how political persuasion and institutional relationships work at the level where law is actually made and enforced.
For a future litigator, this exposure is not incidental. The law that governs commercial disputes, regulatory compliance, and business relationships is shaped by the political processes I have watched and participated in. Understanding how legislative intent gets translated into judicial interpretation, how regulatory agencies actually interact with the businesses they govern, how advocacy connects to outcome — these are things you can read about or you can see for yourself. I've seen them.
My political science degree gave me the academic framework. The civic engagement filled in what textbooks leave out — how decisions actually get made, how relationships between powerful people really work, and why advocacy succeeds or fails on things that have nothing to do with the strength of the argument.