Recent Updates

 

03/07/2026 12:00 PM

Meet the man using “shiny things” to fuel veteran recovery

 

03/07/2026 12:00 PM

Jaecoo 7 - the ultimate test: My family holiday in £30k Chinese SUV

 

03/07/2026 12:00 PM

Top 10: World’s longest road tunnels

 

03/07/2026 12:00 PM

Ford returns to F1 with a plan to win - and improve the Transit

 

03/07/2026 12:00 PM

Ted Kravitz: "I want to make everyone feel like F1 insiders"

 

03/07/2026 12:00 AM

New BYD battery can fully charge in under 10 minutes

 

03/07/2026 12:00 AM

Revealed: New AMG GT gets driver-focused cabin and digital sunroof

 

03/07/2026 12:00 AM

Stellantis will shrink UK operations without ZEV mandate changes

 

03/07/2026 12:00 AM

Lewis Hamilton is the greatest ever – even without title eight

 

03/07/2026 12:00 AM

Plug-in hybrid Lotus Eletre will arrive in June with 939bhp

<<    1   2   3   4   5   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 7713   Next >
Meet the man using “shiny things” to fuel veteran recovery
Saturday, Mar 07, 2026 12:00 PM
mwicjamescameron James Cameron tells Autocar how a shared love of machines is helping to solve the veteran mental health crisis

James Cameron knows that if you ask a veteran to sit in a circle and talk about their feelings, they might never show up. But if you ask them to fix a gearbox? They’ll be there at 0700 sharp.

In the latest Autocar Meets podcast, the former Royal Tank Regiment officer and CEO of Mission Motorsport explains his "shiny things" strategy.

Since 2012, his charity has evolved from a racing niche into a powerhouse of veteran advocacy, bridging the chasm between the barracks and the boardroom.

Speaking from the charity’s base at Bicester Heritage, Cameron describes the "love of machines" as a Trojan horse for mental health.

"The shiny things attract veterans who might otherwise struggle with isolation," Cameron told Autocar. "Once they’re engaged, we focus on the mental health piece. The charity is called Mission Motorsport – but we actually do very little motorsport."

And it's not just mental health that Mission Motorsport deals with. Cameron identifies a "language barrier" that leaves highly skilled veterans invisible to civilian employers.

“The military drums out individual ego from day one. In a corporate HR world that demands self-promotion, veterans often struggle to say: 'I am the best candidate.'"

The disconnect can be staggering. Cameron, for instance, cites the case of Gary Dunning, a veteran who summarised his service as "digging trenches". Under closer inspection, Dunning had actually spent 18 months managing HR for a NATO headquarters of more than 400 people.

For the full episode, head to Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you normally get your podcasts from.

< Prev    of 7713   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields