Voting is open
The longer we give her to turn the FDO into a private fiefdom with far-ranging power to control colonial development, the greater the potential for long term problems becomes. If her problem was personal ambition within Virmire's system (say, she wants to run for and win the office of president in 10-20 years) I wouldn't be so worried. Instead, she seems to be gathering legal powers into an organization well suited to building up a secret power base.

The director's an asari; if we keep leaving her in power indefinitely she'll keep doing this indefinitely, and while we can tolerate it now I don't want to have to spend the next fifty years wondering why she keeps trying to amass more control, then watch her laugh and flee the cluster after we resume contact with the Citadel, on a private spaceship stuffed with every kind of expensive treasure to enable her to keep her embezzled billions. Or to find out she's founded something like, well, the Lystheni out there.
While I'm in full agreement with you, I think it's also important to look at the issue of creating an independent institution with this kind of power. The FDO has all the hallmarks of an organization on its way to becoming a state within a state and giving them more power is dangerous. Even if Virani herself was the most upstanding, loyal and competent director of such an agency, we still need to prevent the creation an institution with this kind of power.

The same is true for the instition of Prime Minister by the way, which we'll need to scale way back before we resign. Can't have that kind of power invested in one person.
 
I dunno. I can totally imagine Poptart eventually writing a character who does things we don't like with the powers of this office. Plus, it's kind of a metagamey argument.

Then there's the eventual costs of brand new personal barrier tech for a Billion Sapient Army...
We may wind up with a very high 'tooth to tail' ratio of military manpower, wherein we only have, need, or can afford barriers for a fraction of our troops, but it hardly matters because they're the only ones who actually fight.

While I'm in full agreement with you, I think it's also important to look at the issue of creating an independent institution with this kind of power. The FDO has all the hallmarks of an organization on its way to becoming a state within a state and giving them more power is dangerous. Even if Virani herself was the most upstanding, loyal and competent director of such an agency, we still need to prevent the creation an institution with this kind of power.

The same is true for the instition of Prime Minister by the way, which we'll need to scale way back before we resign. Can't have that kind of power invested in one person.
You're right to point out hazards of very powerful institutions. Hopefully we can convincingly play Mira as someone willing to eventually step down, but for now we kiiiinda need her Martial bonuses.
 
We may wind up with a very high 'tooth to tail' ratio of military manpower, wherein we only have, need, or can afford barriers for a fraction of our troops, but it hardly matters because they're the only ones who actually fight.
The case in point might be the Marines. Half a million marines is considerably cheaper.

I'd not be surprised if actually implementing and deploying personal barrier tech will need new training or even doctrinal changes to be used effectively. The cadence of being able to break cover to press an advantage, then taking cover to allow the recharge delay, etc.

Not that we have any money, but it might be worth developing (and field-testing) them before we redesign our Marine forces, lest we have to do it again for barrier-equipped Marines. We've been caught out by the situation changing in the middle of a reform before (like our previous navy logistics upgrade, iirc)
 
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Not a vote...

[ ][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.

Question for the GM with our recent improved logistics is it possible to transfer army units to other planets/systems in a reasonable timescale? Given how long the reformation for the marines has been on a backburner having SOMEONE to clear out Rachni from facilities too valuable to bomb from orbit would be essential. Plus while they'd be unsuited for naval action the Army would have access to heavy armour which should help even the odds when fighting Rachni on the ground.

Secondly on demobilisation I'm guessing baring something disastrous we would be able to stand troops down gradually?

For everyone else we do have a ready made excuse for massive sudden improvements... The Prothean archives/base/what-ever-the-hell-it-is we have been raiding/fighting/investigating. It'll be little more than a legal fiction as is but if we can muddy the waters with other developments like miniaturised shields and drone improvements that very clearly didn't come from the Quarians it might fly. Of course we'd need to actually make those improvements first.

On a slightly longer term we could offer to trade Shield technology to Admiral Malan in return for official access to his fleet databases. It'd be a hard sell (albeit easier than just asking) but selling it as an equal trade rather than as a gift should reduce any diplomatic penalties with his government when they find out about it.
 
@PoptartProdigy if the expanded army gets rubber stamped would a martial cation next turn be possible to "stream" the volunteers. By that I mean work out (test/analyse for) those who are going to stick around and give them standard military training, and for the others give them a military technical training program.

I have cousin whose joined the Asutralian army for the sole purpose of becoming a qualified electronics technician, after his 3 years training he does 4 years servicce and then he's out with a civilian equivalent qualification, some cash in his pocket and 4 years trade experience.
 
Could we expand the Marines instead of the Army? Or just combine the two branches of service? I don't see any reason that army troopers couldn't do marine duties. As much as the USMC likes to beat their chest, marines aren't all that special.

Eh, I'll still vote for it.

Yeah. This is my worry since I planned on starting Marine Recruitment this coming turn.

@PoptartProdigy what affect would this have on that option?
 
[][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.

We're doing a very good job at the moment. We don't really need to declare anything polarising just yet.

[][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.

I don't agree with her suggestion, but I'm not going to fire someone who is doing a good job just because they're making helpful (if also ambitious) suggestions.

[][NAME] Rebirth
[][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp!

E: When it comes to Virani, I don't want to punish a competent subordinate just for being ambitious. Depending on what Mira and the MoI know of her, unless Virani has significant issues, I'm fine with giving her deserving promotions she may be looking for if they are available. We should have promotions available in the future at least, since I think we're still expanding our government bureaucracy.

When it comes to complaints about the centralisation of power the FDO has, and speculation of how the leader of the FDO can abuse it... That can literally be said about every important position of power, and the FDO is very important for the Virminian state. Short of putting a team or three from MoI on observing the FDO (which I assume our intrigue advisor already keeps an eye on our important staff) or completely restructuring the department (which we really don't need to do when we are still quite a tiny star nation), I don't know what else we could do besides the usual; cultivate loyalty from your close subordinates so you actually trust them to do their job.
 
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While I'm in full agreement with you, I think it's also important to look at the issue of creating an independent institution with this kind of power. The FDO has all the hallmarks of an organization on its way to becoming a state within a state and giving them more power is dangerous. Even if Virani herself was the most upstanding, loyal and competent director of such an agency, we still need to prevent the creation an institution with this kind of power.

The same is true for the instition of Prime Minister by the way, which we'll need to scale way back before we resign. Can't have that kind of power invested in one person.

Plus the FDO is acting like the Dutch East India Trading company.

Edit: if they colonize to close then we have no choice but to back the decision. Thus giving them a very strong tempo for no reason.

Bitch needs to learn how to sit down and be humble.
 
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Vote's open.

Everybody, to clarify: The FDO building ground infrastructure would be on their budget, both cost and upkeep. Those 70,000 credits they get every year. Commensurately, FDO-built colonies are going to be extremely small, and will grow slowly; think, "we built a mining outpost just like we do every year, but this time it sits on the ground." Virani is asking for this because ground infrastructure is labor-intensive, while in this case (Nimal Pak) also being the key to a massive industrial expansion; she identifies it as the most efficient way to address some of the problems Virmire faces.

But I'm specifically responding to the complaint, "We can't afford that!"; you don't have to. You'll have nothing to do with it, in fact. It'll be funded and run directly by the FDO. If that is the sole reason for your opposition, avail yourself of the up-to-date information. Poptart away!
Could we expand the Marines instead of the Army? Or just combine the two branches of service? I don't see any reason that army troopers couldn't do marine duties. As much as the USMC likes to beat their chest, marines aren't all that special.

Eh, I'll still vote for it.

At the scale this operates on I can understand not being able to make them all marines, but I'd expect this to be be able to siphon off a portion of the recruits to become void marines. Specialist training tends to be a thing for recruits that stand out from what I've heard. While I doubt it would be enough to expand the void marines on it's own, I'd expect to make it easier to do and cheaper than getting them from the general population.
The issue is not one of scale, specifically. Remember that this is an Assembly and Army initiative. The Assembly is running it, the Army is implementing it. Neither is qualified to recruit for the Void Marines. Void marine infantry have very advanced duties, well in excess of ground-based infantry, and moreover a totally unique means of operation, being necessarily and entirely ship-based. This requires specialized and advanced training. That's not a mark against the regular infantry; they don't need to board and defend ships. Thus even aside from the quality demanded of the Void Marines -- which, given their vital role in protecting the Navy, is the literal highest Virmire can produce -- there are demands to void marine training which neither the Assembly nor the Army are qualified to meet. Thus, the VVMC lies beyond the purview of this bill.

That's not even getting into the insanity that is the standards for Void Marines serving aboard EC ships.
Once we have completed our public works projects, will they have increased our yearly income, given that they are expanding the civilian economy?
Possibly. The MoF is currently pulling some economic black magic to insulate your income from the effects of the crash, so how the eventual recovery will interact with that is somewhat unclear.
@tech - we do provide the means for maintenance of the fleet, we are looking what they are doing (Rachni/2-day war), we've got performance scans ... and a war to fight. Could we tell them we were reverese engineering what we scanned?
The Republic is unlikely to like that excuse even if they buy it. Also, this data contains several doctrinal innovations that scans wouldn't have yielded.
I don't believe so.
We have 3 HQ Mines waiting for exploitation; they're expensive, but each brings in ~22k.
Still

@PoptartProdigy
Can you please,at your leisure, explicitly state the difference between Diamonds In The Rough and Low-Hanging Fruit?
What is unclear about the provided descriptions?
Question for the GM with our recent improved logistics is it possible to transfer army units to other planets/systems in a reasonable timescale? Given how long the reformation for the marines has been on a backburner having SOMEONE to clear out Rachni from facilities too valuable to bomb from orbit would be essential. Plus while they'd be unsuited for naval action the Army would have access to heavy armour which should help even the odds when fighting Rachni on the ground.

Secondly on demobilisation I'm guessing baring something disastrous we would be able to stand troops down gradually?
That issue is more Army-side than Navy-side. Your Army is built to maneuver and fight on Virmire. That said, improved naval logistics helps a little, since the Navy would be the ones doing the lifting.

I will let the thread control Virmire's rate of demobilization.
@PoptartProdigy if the expanded army gets rubber stamped would a martial cation next turn be possible to "stream" the volunteers. By that I mean work out (test/analyse for) those who are going to stick around and give them standard military training, and for the others give them a military technical training program.

I have cousin whose joined the Asutralian army for the sole purpose of becoming a qualified electronics technician, after his 3 years training he does 4 years servicce and then he's out with a civilian equivalent qualification, some cash in his pocket and 4 years trade experience.
Programs like that are a symptom of peacetime. Mira hadn't put that program on her docket yet, but once she has those soldiers, she intends to use them.
Yeah. This is my worry since I planned on starting Marine Recruitment this coming turn.

@PoptartProdigy what affect would this have on that option?
Zero.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
-If a good mandate presents itself, otherwise, this is fine.

[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
-No real opinion, open for change.

[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
-Good points have been made. Stagnating her career should weaken her ambition.

[X][NAME] Rebirth. Descriptive of attitude upon settling.
-Once again, in a heartbeat will change.

[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
-Seems useful, and keeps the Senate happy.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.

She isn't that much of a threat that we need to be overly concerned, especially if we start adopting those same ideas.

[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.

I don't trust her. Ambition is all well and good and useful, but we have given her powers far and beyond her remit. This isn't even something we need her to do, really. I want to stop this here and give her a clear remit of space based infrastructure. Someone else can take over groundside operations and development and spread the power around.

[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.

Yeah sure.

[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.

This is a crucial delaying tactic that will allow us time to implement solutions at a more reasonable pace. Once these people go back to the workforce, we can ensure that they have jobs. This basically covers the problem of "unemployment benefits" by giving people work. We also have to throw the Assembly a bone.
 
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[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.

The long term effects might not be the best, but if we don't keep things afloat in the short term there won't be a long term to think of.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][NAME] Rebirth
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
 
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I have a sneaky (and probably not very good) idea to 'justify' implementing the Quarian stuff. I don't know for sure how much the Quarians know about the Lysenthi and how much data we shared with them, but if it's not very much we may be able to pass off the improvements as unused tech and the like from the Lysenthi. If we're feeling particularly audacious, we might even tweak what we've got and try to get the Quarians to "help us implement" it.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] Yes: Diamonds In the Rough. The FDO will prioritize systems that return the most profit, expense no object.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
Adhoc vote count started by Thors_Alumni on May 7, 2018 at 2:13 PM, finished with 55 posts and 30 votes.

Adhoc vote count started by Thors_Alumni on May 7, 2018 at 2:14 PM, finished with 55 posts and 30 votes.

  • [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][POLICY] Yes: Diamonds In the Rough. The FDO will prioritize systems that return the most profit, expense no object.
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
    [X][COLONIES] Yes, Virani makes an excellent argument. You need people in jobs and more production, and a faster, cheaper, and easier start to a second colony world is one of the best possible ways to ensure that.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][BILL] Veto for this one. Bill rejected. Army does not expand.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Rebirth
    [X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
    [X][POLICY] Yes, to Low Hanging Fruit
    [X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
    [X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
    [X][BILL] Veto for this one. Bill rejected. Army does not expand.
    [X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
 
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[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives waymore time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.

I'm not sure about the direction of the FDO, so I'll leave that blank for now.
I'm still wary of the army expansion but we'll probably need them to clear out the Rachni on the ground at some point so I guess I'll vote for it.
 
[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] Yes: Diamonds In the Rough. The FDO will prioritize systems that return the most profit, expense no object.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and may actually lead to worse problems eventually by way of all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way more time to prepare for them and implement solutions. Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefits are self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
 
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[X][PM] Campaign as normal. Ti'ord has gathered substantial support, but not nearly enough to threaten you as things stand.
[X][POLICY] No, a focus on a well-connected and -developed mining network can only be to your benefit at the moment.
[X][COLONIES] No, this sets a poor precedent. The FDO will retain a limited remit of space-based development, and you will develop Nimal Pak at your leisure.
[X][NAME] Assilia Prime. Utilitarian and easily-scaled.
[X][BILL] Fetch me my rubber stamp! Assembly implements an army expansion option, raising the size of the standing army to a full one billion individuals in combat roles (from its current four hundred million). Takes up significant unemployed slack and lessens strain on civilian economy by way of removing huge swathe of population from civilian economy. Not actually a long-term fix and mayactually lead to worse problems eventually by wayof all of those individuals eventually going back onto the civilian market, all at once, but gives way moretime to prepare for them and implement solutions.Also: gigantic army. Some would say the benefitsare self-evident. -50,000 yearly income.
 
I'm still wary of the army expansion but we'll probably need them to clear out the Rachni on the ground at some point so I guess I'll vote for it.
TBH, I'd like to actually start reducing the Army in measured doses the moment we are securely in economic recovery. We don't really need a seventh of our population under arms and if we start throwing that many people at the Rachni, we might have more problems.
 
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