It really depends on the school. Most graduates of first and second tier law schools are able to pass the bar exam and find gainful employment as lawyers, or in a related field. But going to a "third tier toilet" law school seldom pays off, at least not financially.
>Most graduates of first and second tier law schools are able to pass the bar exam and find gainful employment as lawyers,
You believe this to be the case, because you're relying on the statistics provided by the office I described.
>But going to a "third tier toilet" law school seldom pays off, at least not financially.
This is a solid T2 school. But if you were working at Subway whatever hours they'd give you, they marked you down as employed for the purposes of saying their graduates get jobs.
I am quite confident that not only is philosophy a waste when it comes to finding gainful employment, going to law school to put that philosophy to good use is just doubling down on the same bad gamble. Large fraction? What about the remainder?