Still on the theme of
veterans of our armed services, I just never get over how many ways there are
to hang them out to dry. I mean—they suit up to do a necessary job that ranges
from frequently boring and unpleasant to fatal, for completely crap pay, and basically
no respect from the people they protect.
And when they get
out, having been trained to do things like accurately fire the M4 carbine in
tight situations, efficiently search vehicles for IEDs or maintain Apache
attack helicopters in places you’d have trouble pronouncing—for some reason, no
one wants to hire them to work in an office or a factory.
So—even though I’m
not at all a fan of either their products or their ubiquity, I say big up to Starbucks
for committing to a program to hire
10,000 vets over the next five years. They’ll be placed in a full range of
positions from front-line baristas to corporate management.
And, since it’s ‘Bucks’
corporate policy to offer health coverage to all employees, they’ll have access
to a full range of health care regardless of how many hours a week they work.
Which wouldn’t be the case at other companies that have set up similar
programs.
Yes, Walmart, that’s
you I’m talking about.
One of the most
telling aspects of the NPR story about this is the comment by Rob Pocarelli,
the ex-JAG prosecutor who’s now a staff attorney at ‘Bucks. Before joining the
coffee giant he was told by an interviewer that he might not be a good fit for
the particular legal establishment because, “I think you’re going to find more
of the intellectual type in the law firm environment.”
Yeah—because anyone
stupid enough to say that, to a lawyer, in an interview is a mental giant.
Anyhow—props to
Starbucks. I really hope this program is successful and that it goads other
corporations to step up to the plate the way these veterans have done.
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