>The interview was going swimmingly until I met up with one interviewer who was apparently anti-military. Using the Google "Do No Evil" mantra as a pretense, he asked me how many people I'd killed when I served. When I explained to him that I was MI, he then asked if I could estimate how many people were killed because of the intelligence I'd gathered. The implication was I was either an evil, efficient killer or an incompetent one - a real no-win situation.
The right answer would be to talk about all the military and civilian lives that were saved because of the intelligence gathered. The comments on the post talk about how such a question was a huge violation of US labor law.
>The interview was going swimmingly until I met up with one interviewer who was apparently anti-military. Using the Google "Do No Evil" mantra as a pretense, he asked me how many people I'd killed when I served. When I explained to him that I was MI, he then asked if I could estimate how many people were killed because of the intelligence I'd gathered. The implication was I was either an evil, efficient killer or an incompetent one - a real no-win situation.
The right answer would be to talk about all the military and civilian lives that were saved because of the intelligence gathered. The comments on the post talk about how such a question was a huge violation of US labor law.