Okay,
This little quote rubbed me the wrong way
As far as heavys vs fighters I would have to say that airlines like the heavy guys a little more. The main reason is that you fly heavys just like you fly airliners and you are part of a crew and therefore are use to working as a team and getting from a to b safely in a crew'd flightdeck. Fighter guys work alone and sometimes lack on the CRM part of flying.
I don't know about heavy pilots verses fighter pilots in hiring, but based on the fact the AF produces a lot more heavy pilots than fighter pilots (much to the shock and dismay of many UPT students about 1/4 way into UPT!), I'd guess the airlines hire statistically about as many of one type as the other.
The CRM quote is pure bunk. It takes a tremendous amount of teamwork and skill to work with a 2, 4, 8, 16 ship, or larger package and do all the required coordination across separate cockpits. It certainly involves a heck of a lot more cooridination, briefing skills, and task management than I see being used by 3 guys bouncing across the dark sky in a 727. It may be a different form of CRM than you train to in heavies, but its just as real, and just as vital. As an AF CRM instructor, I taught CRM to fighter pilots, and went to quite a few cross-tell meetings on the subject with pilots from other weapon systems including the various heavies. In fact, many inputs we made to the C130J system guys as they started integrating new technology into their cockpit was to follow the lead of the F-15E community when it came to integrating glass cockpits and multi-tasking in high workload enviroments (realizing that F15E guys have to use ONLY verbal communication as the non-verbal kind of stuff is useless ina tandem aircraft). So...fighter guys were making inputs to heavy drivers on CRM basics...imagine that! Briefing, task management, communication, risk assessment, flight intergrity and or crew coordination, and effective, professional debriefs are all hallmarks of an effective CRM program. With all due respect to my strat and tac airlift brethren, heavy drivers DO NOT have a monopoly on those skills, nor are they the only ones who appreciate their proper use. They may have started verbalizing the mantra first (back when MAC bought off on the ideas), but they certainly aren't the only guys using the skills.