“What do I have to do to get a job in government?”

Caterpickles archives clean-out continues this week, with a seven-year-old conversation in which my daughter asks whether one day she could make money making money.





Mommyo: “Why do you ask?”





The Five-Year-Old: “I want to make money.”





Mommyo: “Well, you’ll need to go to college, work hard, and study.”





The Five-Year-Old: “But I already know how to draw the pictures.”





Mommyo: “What pictures?”





The Five-Year-Old, impatiently: “On the money. I just don’t know how they make so many copies of it.”





Mommyo: “Oh. You mean you actually want to make money.”





The Five-Year-Old: “Yes.”





Mommyo: “So what you really want to know is how do you get a job at the federal mint?”





The Five-Year-Old: “Oh, is that where they make the money?”





Turns out the U.S. Mint hires people from all sorts of backgrounds



Admittedly, I mostly wrote this conversation down because I was in the habit of posting funny things my daughter said on the blog on Saturday mornings at the time, so was always looking for new material. But, in case you’d like to know too, the U.S. Mint employs people with a wide range of backgrounds and a wide variety of skills.





It turns out you don’t have to be an artist to help manufacture official U.S. currency. According the U.S. Mint’s website, chemists, information technology specialists, financial managers, mechanics, machinists, marketers, sales people, security officers, and human resource professionals all have plenty of work to do when it comes to creating and securing the currency that keeps our economic engine humming.





Learn more at the Careers at the United States Mint website.





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Careers at the United States Mint (U.S. Mint)The Eight-Year-Old goes on strike (Caterpickles)
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Published on September 27, 2019 14:22
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