ppragman
No pasa nada.
I have yet to fly with a Aviation College guy who was any better than a straight 61 or small school 141 guy when it came to ADM or stick and rudder skills in the jet. Sure they could tell me all about high altitude weather and air crash investigation and how a VOR worked but mostly in their first couple of hundred hours they couldn't think their way out of a wet paper bag. Same as every other low time guy just getting into bigger/faster operations.
You're right, the 1500 hour requirement is a bandaid for the bigger problem that anybody can pay their way into an airline job and there is very little if any screening. That said, I'll take every little bit of band aid I can in preventing guys that have no business in the pointy end of a jet (or big prop) from being there.
Lol, systems and weather, and all that other jazz, though important, is typically not the straw that breaks the camels back. Its piss-poor ADM, lousy stick and rudder, and simple arrogance. The guys with decent ADM are going to be ok anyway, why? Because they aren't going to jump into something that will kill them without having a thorough understanding of the specifics of the machine. They're the guys who are going to study outside of the "Bob's Air Taxi and Hot Wing BBQ's" ground school to make sure they're proficient on systems, emergency procedures, etc. Others not so much. These guys may be able to diagram the electrical system to the individual wire, program the EFIS at lightning speed, and mathematically calculate the rate of ice accretion at different temperature dew point spreads, but if a pilot doesn't have the ADM (or as its more commonly known of - common sense) to try to get out of a bad situation, he's not going to last all that long. Either he'll get killed, get fired, or wind up someplace that doesn't care about that and has a system in place (read restrictive GOM) to prevent him from making decisions for himself.