After working 30 years as a social worker at the same company my mom was fired because she can't work a computer as well as someone my age. 6 or 7 years ago my father was fired for a similar reason, I remember hearing him talk about how he had to train the college kids with fancier degrees than him to do the job he was getting fired from.
On the one hand I understand that people need to be able to do their job in order to keep it, and part of the includes keeping up with the times and adapting. I remember an episode of Scrubs which guest starred Dick Van Dike as an old doctor using medical practices that were very dated and how it showed how failing to keep up can cause a person to lose the ability to do their job well.
On the other hand though, doesn't being a loyal employee for almost the entirety of your adult life earn you anything? I mean, my mom's 61, she can't go out and start another career. Would her being less efficient for 3-5 more years really have been that much of a detriment to the company? Maybe the company is going in a direction where it would have been a too much trouble, but if it wasn't...really?
I don't know. I've become someone adept at spotting the anti-silver lining in everything, but I just feel like it's in everything. There is no royal flush in the poker game of life, as we're playing with an deck of cards that is half-Uno, half-Pokemon Trading Card Game. Using Hyper Beam against a Draw Four is flawed from the start.
That rant took a weird turn. *shrugs*