Not the 1% looking for toilets in lower Manhattan. This morning a commentator on the news said America's military is 1% of our population. That is literally true only if you round up. The two million men and women on active duty and in Guard and Reserve unit are less the 2/3 of 1% and decreasing as budget cuts slice through every branch of the military.
I am one of the few soldiers who knows as many people with PhDs as with Aviators Wings. PhDs are another less-than-one-percent group of Americans.
Of course, working at a non-profit and serving as a sergeant, I am not part of the 1% idolized by Fox News and reviled by the Occupy Wall Street protestors. But compared with 7 billion people in the world right now, I am pretty close to the top 1% of the wealthiest people in the world.
But the real problem right now is not the 1% who are currently serving. As the military shrinks, more and more veterans will join the ranks of the unemployed. Veterans are already have higher unemployment than the population in general. It will soon get worse.
I heard Mitch McConnell this morning say that he is against any sort of Veteran's preference in hiring. Really? Veterans are always behind their peers in education and opportunity. Is there a loss to society when it gives veterans, especially young veterans preference in hiring?