You can determine how much a person is worth to the comppany/army by the cost of their training.GunSlinger OIF II wrote:
cant put a dollar sign next human life. Ive been responsible for over 13 million dollars worth of equipment. I have a GED.Spearhead wrote:
I posted this question in the other B2 crashing thread
But the crew of the B2 is honestly worth more than 1.2 billion dollars? They spend more money training them than on the B2 itself?
That is fucking crazy.
Two topics up about this at the same time.
Their experience cost more. Just look at WWII at Pacific war theatre - Japan lost war because they lacked natural resources\experienced pilots. After Battle for Midway (when they lost 4 big aircraft carriers) they still had enough carriers and good aircraft, yet lacked good pilots.Gawwad wrote:
You can determine how much a person is worth to the comppany/army by the cost of their training.
Last edited by Longbow (2008-02-25 05:44:26)
That's only true when there is a shortage of skilled pilots.Longbow wrote:
Their experience cost more. Just look at WWII at Pacific war theatre - Japan lost war because they lacked natural resources\experienced pilots. After Battle for Midway (when they lost 4 big aircraft carriers) they still had enough carriers and good aircraft, yet lacked good pilots.Gawwad wrote:
You can determine how much a person is worth to the comppany/army by the cost of their training.
All we need now is for John Travolta to organise a leet group of commandos to steal the nuclear ordinance that was on board, attempt to hide it underground and then on a train, while being foiled at every turn by both the guy AND girl from Fern Gully.
And then for him to die some elaborate death possibly including impaling and his shoes switching colour between scenes.
Care to guess the movie?
And then for him to die some elaborate death possibly including impaling and his shoes switching colour between scenes.
Care to guess the movie?
Stealthy..
Broken Arrow?SharkyMcshark wrote:
All we need now is for John Travolta to organise a leet group of commandos to steal the nuclear ordinance that was on board, attempt to hide it underground and then on a train, while being foiled at every turn by both the guy AND girl from Fern Gully.
And then for him to die some elaborate death possibly including impaling and his shoes switching colour between scenes.
Care to guess the movie?
Although I don't recall the shoes switching colours.
"If you want a vision of the future, imagine SecuROM slapping your face with its dick -- forever." -George Orwell
me first! mine was first!ATG wrote:
Two topics up about this at the same time.
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?id=94246
2 days, 15 hours ago
but srsly, i will delete my topic if it is bumped again... no need for two of these.
guess they shouldn't have made them all crash into our ships... resource management ftl.Longbow wrote:
Their experience cost more. Just look at WWII at Pacific war theatre - Japan lost war because they lacked natural resources\experienced pilots. After Battle for Midway (when they lost 4 big aircraft carriers) they still had enough carriers and good aircraft, yet lacked good pilots.Gawwad wrote:
You can determine how much a person is worth to the comppany/army by the cost of their training.
So much for stealth
Lack of experienced pilots forced Japanese Imperial Navy (and later Army) to accept that tough decition - launch kamikaze attacks on US naval ships. There was no kamikaze in early war on Pacific Ocean - they were first seen in 1944. Kamikaze was the only way to deliver their bombs and torpedos for unexperienced pilots.steelie34 wrote:
guess they shouldn't have made them all crash into our ships... resource management ftl.
I'm rooting for yours.steelie34 wrote:
me first! mine was first!ATG wrote:
Two topics up about this at the same time.
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?id=94246
2 days, 15 hours ago
but srsly, i will delete my topic if it is bumped again... no need for two of these.
Nature is a powerful force. Those who seek to subdue nature, never do so permanently.
Geez. Does anybody have to have the pressure of operating a more expensive piece of equipment than that?
idk, maybe the space shuttle or f-22? Good thing they're alright.Ajax_the_Great1 wrote:
Geez. Does anybody have to have the pressure of operating a more expensive piece of equipment than that?
The Space Shuttle, perhaps. The F-22 is only 150 million.