Google Sites lives in a walled garden of corporate despair. To share your analysis of Chapter 11 bankruptcy nuances, you have to send a link that looks like this:
https://sites.google.com/view/john-doe-legal-blog/homepage/contact
Nobody is clicking that. Nobody.
Lord Justice Lol drops a single PNG of a judge crying over a bad objection. It gets 14,000 retweets, 3 blue checks crying "Unprofessional!", and a citation in a Law360 article titled "The Rise of the Shitposting Jurist."
Concept: A dynamic widget embedded in the sidebar or footer of the site that tracks "Rulings" or "Lols." It allows visitors to click a button to "Bang the Gavel," increasing a live counter. This adds gamification and interactivity to a static site. lord justice lol google sites better
Technical Architecture:
Let’s be real. The law is dry. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are not exactly a beach read.
Google Sites makes the law drier. It is the digital equivalent of a stale saltine cracker. Google Sites lives in a walled garden of corporate despair
Lord Justice Lol makes the law fun. He turns Rule 11 sanctions into a punchline. He turns the Ninth Circuit into a recurring character who is always crying. He is doing more for legal literacy than your 40-page PDF on Stare Decisis.
If you’d like, I can expand any section into a full draft (introduction, literature review, methodology, or a complete 3,000–5,000 word paper) or generate an abstract and bibliography formatted for a specific journal. Which would you prefer?
Why is there a "Lol" in the middle of this legal doctrine? Because Lord Justice Lol understands the absurdity of gatekeeping. Let’s be real
Web designers will tell you that using Google Sites is "unprofessional." They will tell you that you need a custom domain and SSL certificates and SEO meta tags.
But if you are building a page titled "My Top 50 Spoons (Ranked)," do you need SEO? No. You need the freedom to be silly.
Google Sites encourages the "lol." It lowers the barrier to absurdity. It empowers the chaos goblins, the niche collectors, and the fanfic archivists. It is the only platform where you can embed a YouTube video of a goat screaming next to a table of your D&D stats without the layout breaking.