Old Fashion. With the right training, a 1200 hour pilot flying in a complex jet environment is not only doable, but can only be safe. How many hours you think those F16 drivers have? If you want to get humbled, go up against a 1200, 1300, 1400 hour pilot in a sim and try to fly an ILS better than he does. That's their bread and butter and they do that all day long. You'll get schooled son. The regionals, and some nationals, take low time guys, train them right, then stick them in the right seat. I think initially it is more of a learning environment than a working environment, but 1 or 2 huundred hours and things tend to smooth out. They fly all day long in aircraft more sophiscated than a C750, several legs a day, with 50+ peopel behind them, in and out of crap WX. The learning curve for them is high, and most tend to rise up and meet the challenge. If they are doing that, I'd certainly say they are qualified to fly anything we are. I would not suggest turning loose a 1200 hour pilot trained in a civilian environment as a PIC in such an aircraft, but have him/her supervised by a qualified PIC is just fine. I'm sure we have all flown with higher time so called PICs that don't have any idea what they are doing or have any business flying in the PIC capacity. It's all about the decision making skills of a crew, not the total time, within reason of course. 1200 hours is not a lot of time, but to shut the door on a good stick and trainable pilot does not make much sense to me.