(CBS News)  
There's no better government job creator than the U.S. 
military. Americans sign up for a lot of reasons, such as to serve their
 country and for the health and education benefits . But CBS News 
correspondent Michelle Miller reports, some young people are finding 
that the armed forces are the only employment game in town these days.
  Joining the marines was not part of Tyler Mitchell's career 
path. He graduated with a degree in film and video last year, but he 
couldn't find a job in Chicago.
  "The economy makes it 
really tough right now," said Mitchell. "People say, 'You go to college,
 you get a degree, you'll get a great job.' Well nowadays, I don't 
really think that's really the case. You go to college, you get a 
degree, you get a lot of debt, and you don't get a job."
  "I
 can't get a job in the civilian world," he continued, "somebody else 
wants me, so why not go with them?"
  Mitchell will be a 
combat correspondent for the Marine Corps.
  "Bottom line, 
I'll get healthcare, I'll get financial stability, I'll get job 
experience," he said.
  The recession has made it easier to
 recruit people into the military. Since 2008, the armed forces have 
either met or exceeded their recruiting goals for all active duty 
services.
  Lashaun Holmes is a single mother of two in New
 York. The only job she could find was a part-time position that paid 
$185 dollars a week.
  "I don't want to struggle," she 
said, "because it feels like you sinking in a hole. The more you 
struggle, the more you're sinking. It doesn't feel like you're coming 
out and I just want to come out."
  She never considered 
enlisting, until she passed a recruiting center last spring. "Because of
 the economic situation right now, enlisting was my only option," she 
explained.
  The decision was especially hard. She's never
 been away from her children, 10-year old Joi and 2-year-old Legend. The
 navy would not take her unless she gave temporary custody of her 
children to her mother. 
 "I don't like that fact that I'm 
leaving my children," said Holmes. "You try all the time to find another
 job so you can  make ends meet and take care of your family properly. 
It's hard. I really feel like in the end they will be so much better 
off."
  Lashaun will be in the navy for four years. She 
leaves for boot camp in February.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2011/09/02/eveningnews/main20101224.shtml
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment