ABikerSailor
Diamond Member
Yanno......................there are lots of people who worked for the military in highly classified jobs, many of them in intelligence positions or in security. Some of those people have even worked in those positions for over 20 years.
When many of them get out or retire from the military, they take jobs that the military trained them for because they have experience in that field and want to continue to do that type of work.
If they are hired by companies to work in the field that they did in the military, does that mean that the company is trying to "militarize" itself? No. It means that the company sees the value of having someone with experience and training for that position, and they hire those former military personnel for the job.
So what if a person worked for the FBI or DOJ and then decided to work in the private sector doing the job they just left? Many people who have experience prefer to work in something they already know well, and companies prefer to hire people with substantial experience in the position they have open.
This is a nothingburger.
When many of them get out or retire from the military, they take jobs that the military trained them for because they have experience in that field and want to continue to do that type of work.
If they are hired by companies to work in the field that they did in the military, does that mean that the company is trying to "militarize" itself? No. It means that the company sees the value of having someone with experience and training for that position, and they hire those former military personnel for the job.
So what if a person worked for the FBI or DOJ and then decided to work in the private sector doing the job they just left? Many people who have experience prefer to work in something they already know well, and companies prefer to hire people with substantial experience in the position they have open.
This is a nothingburger.