When you came home from the World War, you marched along Fifth Avenue, 
great heavy masses of men, all your feet moving together, one objective, 
one cause, all swaying back and forth as you went along. You were a 
unit. All the people of America applauded. But on the second day they 
disbanded you and they said, “To hell with you,” because you were then 
individuals and politically the soldiers never amounted to anything.

Smedley Butler speech to Bonus Army, 1933

full: 
http://louisproyect.wordpress.com/2011/10/19/smedley-butler-speaks-to-the-bonus-army/

---


NY Times December 17, 2011
As Wars End, Young Veterans Return to Scant Jobs
By SHAILA DEWAN

COLUMBUS, Ohio — In Afghanistan, Cpl. Clayton Rhoden earned about $2,500 
a month jumping into helicopters to chase down improvised explosive 
devices or check out suspected bomb factories.

Now he lives with his parents, sells his blood plasma for $80 a week and 
works what extra duty he can get for his Marine Corps Reserve unit.

Corporal Rhoden, who is 25, gawky and polite with a passion for 
soldiering, is one of the legions of veterans who served in combat yet 
have a harder time finding work than other people their age, a situation 
that officials say will grow worse as the United States completes its 
pullout of Iraq and as, by a White House estimate, a million new 
veterans join the work force over the next five years.

Veterans’ joblessness is concentrated among the young and those still 
serving in the National Guard or Reserve. The unemployment rate for 
veterans aged 20 to 24 has averaged 30 percent this year, more than 
double that of others the same age, though the rate for older veterans 
closely matches that of civilians. Reservists like Corporal Rhoden have 
a bleak outlook as well.

In July 2010, their unemployment rate was 21 percent, compared with 12 
percent for other vets.

“There’s been an upsurge in young people going into the military and not 
staying for a full 20-year career,” said Jane Oates, the assistant 
secretary for employment and training at the Labor Department, which has 
worked to improve the three-day transition assistance program for 
outgoing soldiers and enlisted companies like Facebook to reach them. “I 
think transitions have been difficult, with too few jobs out there and 
lack of clarity about what the employer wants.”

The employment gap cannot be explained by a simple factor like lack of a 
college degree — despite their discipline and training, young veterans 
fare worse in the job market than their peers without degrees.

Employers and veterans seem to view each other as alien species. 
Managers, few of whom have military experience themselves, may fear the 
aftereffects of combat or losing reservists to another deployment. They 
may have difficulty understanding how military accomplishments translate 
to the civilian world.

Young veterans, whose work history may consist entirely of military 
service, often need to learn basics like what to wear to a job 
interview. More important, many say, they are overwhelmed by the 
transition from combat to civilian life.

“It’s shell shock for a lot of them, going from such a structured 
lifestyle to a lifestyle that’s got so many variables,” said Daniel 
Hutchison, 29, who uses his own combat disability check to finance a 
shoestring transition assistance group, Ohio Combat Veterans. “They’re 
dealing with all the emotional things they went through, and they feel 
like they’re alone.”

The Obama administration has championed veterans’ maturity, management 
skills and even their promptness. Employers have jumped on the 
bandwagon, and large companies like JPMorgan Chase and Verizon have 
signed a pledge to hire a total of 100,000 veterans by 2020. More than 
220,000 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan are out of work.

Over a decade of war, the requirement that companies restore reservists 
to their old jobs has placed a heavy burden on businesses, said Ted 
Daywalt, who runs VetJobs.com in Georgia. “Nearly 65 to 70 percent of 
employers will not now hire National Guard and Reserve,” he said. “They 
can’t run their business with someone being taken away for 12 months.”

Though employers typically ask about military service and status on job 
applications, it is illegal to discriminate based on that information.

Corporal Rhoden said his reserve duties had interfered with one job to 
the point that he quit. “I’ve tried restaurants, shipping facilities, 
construction, snow removal businesses, landscaping — pretty much 
anything that you don’t need a college degree to do,” he said.

Veterans have been coached to write résumés that emphasize leadership 
skills instead of “the killing or capture of 350 Al-Qaeda associates,” 
raising some skepticism.

“I’m not necessarily convinced that they have great marketable skills,” 
said Rachel Feldstein, the associate director of New Directions, which 
offers drug rehabilitation, job training and other services to veterans 
in San Diego. “If you train someone to be a sniper, those are not 
necessarily skills that are transferable.”

Young veterans face stiff competition for the jobs that fit them best, 
like policing. In Columbus, Dustin Szarell, 30, said he was passed over 
for work in the Akron Fire Department and as a juvenile corrections 
officer in favor of candidates who had experience in those fields.

The Obama administration has stepped up hiring of veterans, adding more 
than 85,000 to the government payroll since the 2008 fiscal year. On 
Saturday, President Obama praised returning veterans and said “it is 
time to enlist our veterans and all our people in the work of rebuilding 
America.” The administration is trying to shape a “career-ready 
military” whose medics and electricians can more easily attain the 
licenses they need to work as civilians. As of October, the G.I. Bill 
that pays for college can also be used for vocational training or 
apprenticeships.

But many young vets are still working through the aftermath of combat.

In interviews, some veterans said employers overestimated these 
problems. “They have this misconception that we’re all struggling from 
P.T.S.D. in its most severe form, we’re all going to rage out,” said 
Sgt. Kobby Nyen, 25, a Marine reservist and student. “Even a Marine with 
P.T.S.D. has discipline.”

But others acknowledged that coping was an issue. “I don’t know who in 
their right mind would want to hire me when I got back from Afghanistan, 
because I was a disaster,” said Jeff Mancino, 24, who is now studying to 
become a psychologist. “I was 22 and I had to go to rehab — what kind of 
22-year-old does that?”

Often, the veterans Mr. Hutchison of Ohio Combat Veterans sees need much 
more than a job. Recently, he traveled 50 miles to Logan, Ohio, to meet 
Ethan Tomblin-Brooks, 24, who lives in a shell of a camper in his 
parents’ driveway and gets construction work about once a week.

Mr. Tomblin-Brooks, who was injured in Iraq, said he had registered with 
the Veterans Affairs department but had not heard back. Army 
psychologists first diagnosed P.T.S.D., then bipolar disorder, but Mr. 
Tomblin-Brooks said he had no money for treatment, and no transportation.

Mr. Hutchison said he would help him get medical benefits, then tried to 
gently explain how little work is available in construction. Mr. 
Tomblin-Brooks, who has a G.E.D., was at a loss to suggest another prospect.

If he could, he said, he would rejoin the Army. “I kind of like being 
told what to do,” he said. “It makes it a little easier than figuring it 
out on your own.”
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