Update after discovering I can not afford a 4 year school

So my current schedule is:
Accounting
Precal
Microeconomics
*English 102 (its best to get English out of the way)
Some history

Next semester
Calculus
Accounting 2
Macroeconomics
Humanities of the Middle East

Do you presently have a guaranteed position after law school? Is there a relative that will be employing you?
Prospects for employment for attorneys are not good.

from the Bureau of Labor Statistics:

https://www.bls.gov/ooh/legal/lawyers.htm
Based on conversations that I’ve had with my sister re: her corporate law office, they aren’t employing anyone who is unknown to them. They get hundreds of unsolicited applications. Given the fact that there are online ways to get around employing an attorney, and that law schools continue to graduate large numbers of lawyers, there just aren’t the jobs.

If you are okay with that, then study the law.

This schedule looks OK, but run it by the Transfer Advisor, and check any specific requirements for articulation agreements between your CC and the universities that you are targeting for your possible majors. You want to be sure that the coursework matches up correctly.

Just because you have AP credits and DE credits doesn’t mean that you must graduate from your CC in fewer than two years. You can take things more slowly if you need time to pick up the specific coursework required for an articulation agreement. Are you planning to complete an AA or AS degree at the CC? Pay careful attention to how your target universities deal with associate degrees. Some universities will consider an associate degree as fulfilling all of the gen eds and guaranteeing junior status even if a bunch of the credits were earned by AP or CLEP or other credit-by-exam systems that otherwise would not result in credit at that university. If the university you end up at doesn’t have that kind of policy, you need to know which of your AP exams can be accepted for credit and/or placement there. If not all of your AP exams are accepted, you could end up needing to take an extra class or two.

I’d take sociology or American Studies first semester as it’s less likely to be reading/writing intensive than history.
For your first semester you want at least one relatively easy class.