I see how you may think that my statement is conflicting. You must understand that some people, 30% approximately, may have to work with the numbers they have.
Yes, and for some of those people, they will need to give up on the dream of being a lawyer. Either that, or realize that if you do go to law school with your current LSAT, it will be extremely difficult for you to find employment sufficient to pay any debt and you're not likely to get significant (if any) scholarship dollars from any school.
There are several factors that dictate whether a person has "enough" time to study.
Yes, but so what? I'm married, work full time, and still managed to study for the test from late November of last year through June this year, then from mid-July through the October test (retake). So yeah, I understand that there are a variety of things in life that pull at your time, but law school and the law profession are a time drain as well. If this is something important, you will find some time to spend on studying.
Scoring a low LSAT score is not sufficient grounds to start questioning a person’s desire to go to law school and become a lawyer.
This has already been addressed and is simply a strawman.
Also statistically it is extremely hard for any law grad to find work, unless you graduated top 10 from top ranked schools.
Patently false.
The rest of your post is no more than an attempt to justify why you think you shouldn't study harder and retake the LSAT, as well as trying to make yourself feel better that the job opportunities are the same for someone who graduates at the top of their class from a T4 vs. someone at the bottom of their class from a top school. Also, oftentimes, there are job tracks that are simply unavailable to people if they don't have the right pedigree in terms of schools or first jobs, so it's not necessarily true that law school only affects your first job.
For people who have low scores, it's not the end of the world, but it does severely limit your options, particularly when the low score is combined with a lower GPA.
In any event, your OP talked about your soft factors which are good, but the numbers ultimately get you through the door. That's the sad reality of law school admissions. Good luck.