I Have Some Questions...
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Through deep, unhurried conversations, we uncover the moments that shaped them—the doubts, pivots, convictions, and quiet breakthroughs that built their body of work.
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I Have Some Questions...
146: Addison Hosner: "Can the Legal System Be Both Profitable and Ethical?"
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In this episode, Erik sits down with attorney and nonprofit executive Addison Hosner to unpack the realities behind the legal profession — from burnout in family law to the structural incentives that shape how justice is practiced.
Addison shares what it was like running a solo law firm with a massive caseload, why he ultimately left litigation, and what the legal system often gets wrong about efficiency, incentives, and human impact.
The conversation moves beyond career stories into deeper questions about legal ethics, qualified immunity, policing accountability, and how structural incentives shape behavior inside complex systems.
👤 About the Guest
Addison Hosner is a lawyer and former family law practitioner who founded and ran Hosner Law Group before transitioning into nonprofit leadership.
He now serves as Chief Operating Officer at Young Voices, a nonprofit organization focused on promoting ideas around free markets, civil liberties, and public policy.
His work and writing frequently explore topics like criminal justice reform, qualified immunity, and the structural incentives that shape the legal profession.
🧭 Conversation Highlights
Leaving Litigation and the Weight of Family Law
- Addison managed 70–100 active cases at a time as a solo attorney, many involving divorce, custody, and domestic conflict.
- Carrying the emotional weight of those disputes began to affect his health, sleep, and personal relationships.
- The realization came when he asked himself one question: Could I do this for another 35–40 years?
The Hidden Stress of the Legal Profession
- Legal work is far less courtroom drama than TV portrays — it’s mostly paperwork and constant client pressure.
- Lawyers track their time in six-minute increments, creating constant pressure to justify every moment of the day.
- This environment often conditions attorneys to believe that any downtime equals failure.
The Billable Hour Problem
- Law firms are financially incentivized to prolong disputes rather than resolve them quickly.
- Addison shared an experience where he was reprimanded for settling a case too quickly because it reduced billable hours.
- This misalignment of incentives is one of the profession’s most persistent structural issues.
💡Key Takeaways
- Incentives shape behavior more than intentions. Even well-meaning professionals will follow systems that reward certain outcomes.
- The legal system often rewards conflict rather than resolution, especially under billable-hour models.
- Burnout in law isn’t just workload — it’s emotional exposure to human conflict.
- Student debt plays a major role in shaping legal career paths and ethical tradeoffs.
❓ Questions That Mattered
- What happens when a system incentivizes the opposite of what it claims to value?
- Can the legal profession move away from billable hours without collapsing its business model?
- How should society balance police accountability with the realities of dangerous frontline work?
- What would it take to make the legal profession healthier for the people inside it?
🗣️ Notable Quotes
“My worst day as COO is still better than my best day as a practicing attorney.”
“Each case isn’t just work — it’s someone’s life that you’re holding in your hands.”
“Sometimes the system itself is what pushes good people into bad incentives.”
🔗 Links & Resources