How much is that shit worth?What factors go into this equation?Wealth?Education?Lifetime accomplishments?Family?Fame?Seriously, if someone could pay $xxxxx to just off you, what would that amount be?¤i totally came up with the idea for this thread by myself
1/31/2011 9:23:44 AM
aren't there people that determine the worth of someone's life...like if you get killed from some accident and your family sues for wrongful death or something, isn't there someone that will determine how much your life really was worth?
1/31/2011 9:26:09 AM
i've heard from $2,500 - $30,000i think it's more dependent on the "quality" of the killing party than the to be killed party
1/31/2011 9:27:20 AM
Well I'm probably worth about $200. Gotta buy the gun and the ammo.
1/31/2011 9:29:47 AM
Should be your net worthNo one is worth more than their fortune
1/31/2011 9:31:42 AM
it's hard to say... i mean, I personally don't have a price that I would think would be acceptable for my own life, but then again, I am a little biased (as I would be for anyone I know/care about). Objectively, from the outside, I guess it would have to be some sort of formula based on what has been invested (on education/training/social networking), and potential for future productivity (what path they were set on) as well as intangibles (ie: a teacher should get a bump that a coat salesman wouldn't- nothing against coat salesmen)
Yeah, there are people that assign these values to peoples lives.Interestingly enough, this was a very taboo topic of discussion at my former job. We were doing a cost benefit analysis for the value of a soldiers life vs the cost of integrating this very effective but expensive armour.
1/31/2011 9:35:24 AM
'bout $tree.fiddy
1/31/2011 9:36:42 AM
^i was gonna post that^^yeah....that shit gets annoying. An application of my job here could improve a soldier's weapon to hugely improve performance and reliability, but the treatment would have been worth a substantial amount of the gun. I'm interested to know what the body armor was, since I did work with liquid body armor
1/31/2011 9:39:28 AM
the price of any human life is what it would cost to replace them. It has nothing to do with their established wealth.
1/31/2011 9:45:16 AM
Not body armour. Aircraft armour.Who wants to be the asshole that says "Joe Marine is important to me...but not that important" ?[Edited on January 31, 2011 at 9:47 AM. Reason : L]
1/31/2011 9:46:28 AM
i dont know if anyone wants to be that guy, but someone has to do it.
1/31/2011 9:47:53 AM
that's why I think you have to make a formula for it. It sucks to have to explain why, but at least with that, you have an explanation for the value decided upon
1/31/2011 9:49:03 AM
What's the cost of replacing a smile, Shaggy? How about a hug?
1/31/2011 9:49:32 AM
are they mexican? i hear they're worth less
1/31/2011 9:54:12 AM
$1.75 wholesale [Edited on January 31, 2011 at 9:56 AM. Reason : Damn Beat to 3 fiddy]
1/31/2011 9:54:37 AM
1/31/2011 9:55:57 AM
Ford did this with the Pinto and got in a shit ton of trouble for it...they valued life at about $200k
1/31/2011 10:05:14 AM
Shit son, my junk alone is insured for $200k
1/31/2011 10:28:22 AM
There is a calculator online to find your worth. Don't know the address right now.
1/31/2011 10:55:51 AM
in greensboro it is $250 and a bag of weed.Why not just $300 and no weed?I don't understand, in fact, i've never understood.
1/31/2011 11:33:19 AM
$5 lafta bucks
1/31/2011 1:42:37 PM
Fifty dorrar
1/31/2011 2:55:04 PM
I think it's doubled to about $20k a head now... I think inflation has hit the assassin market way harder than the rest of the economy, I remember when a cool $10k would get anyone whacked for you, no problem.
1/31/2011 3:02:18 PM
1/31/2011 3:12:24 PM
1/31/2011 3:14:12 PM
25¢[Edited on January 31, 2011 at 3:19 PM. Reason : http://www.humanforsale.com]
1/31/2011 3:18:47 PM
well i wasn't usin' it
1/31/2011 4:12:40 PM
i think you could probably find some meth head or similar who'd do it for a few hundred. but they wouldn't' be discrete and likely would fuck it up and get caught and rat you out.so i guess it's the professionalism of the hitman that you have to pay a minimum of a few thousand for. and i suppose any base rate assumes a normal, unprotected target. if you were going after a public figure or a crime boss, the cost would go up as the difficulty increases.i wonder if theres any sort of cost structure published on the web. [Edited on January 31, 2011 at 5:07 PM. Reason : ]
1/31/2011 5:02:57 PM
1/31/2011 6:08:59 PM
isn't this what edward norton did in Fight Club before he went nuts?
1/31/2011 6:11:08 PM
It would probably anger you.
1/31/2011 6:13:17 PM
1/31/2011 6:20:18 PM
about tree fiddy
1/31/2011 6:24:07 PM
1/31/2011 6:40:12 PM
came here for the tree.fiddywas not disappointed
1/31/2011 7:02:51 PM
$3.50approximately
1/31/2011 7:11:37 PM
That website says I'm worth $1,077,202
1/31/2011 8:38:54 PM
a dollar
1/31/2011 8:41:37 PM
according to that website $2,593,230
1/31/2011 9:08:35 PM
according to that websiteI think they took off a few million because I'm black [Edited on January 31, 2011 at 9:15 PM. Reason : cheating]
1/31/2011 9:13:56 PM
or added a few!maybe they took off a few million because im female
1/31/2011 9:20:39 PM
$1,774,488According to the site
1/31/2011 9:20:55 PM
mine was really:I really just wanted to see if that old h4x worked
1/31/2011 9:22:02 PM
i have no idea what my iq is. i put 115....
1/31/2011 9:37:24 PM
I was not expecting that... (I thought I was worth less for sure)I'm sure finishing college will bump me up some...[Edited on January 31, 2011 at 9:57 PM. Reason : .]
1/31/2011 9:57:40 PM
A policy analysis class I took discussed the statistical value of a human life used by the EPA, although I'm sure other agencies use such a thing and may have different numbers. I think it was somewhere between 5 to 8 million, I don't remember exactly.And that number was determined by peoples average willingness to pay. I'm sure they have a really complex way of coming up with it, but one of the basic examples that was offered in class was how fast people drive. The time saved and extra productivity trade off versus the increased chance of a serious wreck. It had some sense to it. How much would you pay for a helmet when you want to ride a bike, where is the cut off for risk of injury to the point that it isn't worth it. There are many ways in our everyday lives that we make value judgment on what our life is worth, by how much risk we will accept.A funny example I remember the professor discussing with the EPA trying to make its cost-benefit anaylses more effective, by rating things differently based on age. The statistical value of a human life of a 90 year old to the EPA then should be very low. Whether or not we spend a lot of money on global warming really isn't going to affect their risk level. Whereas the value of a statistical human life for a 18 year old would be much higher to the EPA because they're going to have to endure the environmental experience for a much longer period of time.So they tried to make this change that would actually help old people. Their cost benefit analyses that help them decide policy would better represent old people's interests. But then the AARP got word that the EPA was saying old people had less value and lobbied the new system to death, thus hurting old people. My professor said his friend in the EPA was pushing for the term "millimorts" rather than statistical value of a human life because people only hear "value of a human life." I'm not sure how that turned out though.
1/31/2011 10:28:07 PM
1/31/2011 10:32:32 PM
Maybe value should be assigned according to expected productivity/contribution to society.
1/31/2011 10:37:15 PM
1/31/2011 10:48:42 PM