Soldiers, from the lowest to the highest, don't need pieces of paper, but many will enhance their skills and minds before employment with extended educational needs depending on profession sought, from our failed higher education industry, that's what it has become, to make great employee's in the private sector. Two of the greatest needs for any company come in with their hire, common sense and critical thought as they are trained to hone these which also has been lacking in our education system especially now with teaching to test scores and not allowing teachers to actually teach and develop what each of us have within!
July 15, 2011 - Last Sunday, on the final stop of their final day in North America, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge popped in to a Los Angeles job fair for military veterans and spouses. William and Catherine spent their time with vets and enlightened business leaders looking to pair talent with opportunity.
The unemployment rate among young American veterans is higher than the national average, and the same may be true in the UK, though the UK Office of National Statistics does not post data on veteran employment levels. Yet military service equips most men and women with skills that translate well into private, public and nonprofit sector careers. So why does high unemployment among veterans persist?
Most people associate military service with discipline, hierarchy and command and control. This reputation is well deserved, but it is not complete, and what I found during my five years as a Marine was that the military is a tremendously empowering place for many servicemen and women. It often instills confidence, teamwork and integrity: qualifications crucial for any growing organization. read more>>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
*Unemployment rate among young American veterans is unusually high, says Rye Barcott
*Military service instills integrity, confidence, and teamwork -- ideal for workplace, he says
*There is an ever-widening gulf between the military and civilian society, says Barcott
*Veterans make up 20% of Congress today, compared with 70% in 1975, he says
Rye Barcott, the author of "It Happened on the Way to War", is a former marine and a co-founder of Carolina for Kibera, a nongovernmental organization devoted to alleviating poverty in the Kibera slum of Nairobi.
This would be more effective if the spelling of the article's title were correct. Lose the apostrophe and your argument won't lose all credibility.
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