I agree that nobody should be taught how to fly, and basic skills.The reality is, a PA31, BE99, SA227 or B1900 are probably the biggest, fastest, and most complex aircraft that the average CFI has ever flown. This is an entry level job, which is what the pay implies. If they were hiring previously typed guys, or requiring guys with previous time in type, I would agree with you. But to learn how to fly and manage a complex twin, or fly a turbine for the first time, learn to fly the AMF way, handling emergencies and flying unfamiliar profiles in the sim where they try to constantly kill you is hard to do in 5 days. I have 2 jet types, not once did they do anything to me in those aircraft, that we didn't previously talk about, and train on. Sure, I wasn't hand held through an ILS and spoon fed how to do one in the sim. People have the basics, but to put it together in an unfamiliar aircraft, with an unfamiliar SOP, that DESERVES proper training. On emergencies day in the sim at AMF, there is no training, you have to be satisfactory or else you fail.
That being said, I made it through, so did a lot of people.