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[X] Plan: Prevent another Naboo
Was there not a cost requirement when having faction support?-[X]Factions negotiation: Military Reformists (Republican Security)
Yes, I just included it in the Political Power Spent line.
Edit: changed to ----[X]Political Power Spent: 1000 (500 to propose, 500 for Faction negotiation).----[X]Political Power Spent: 1000 (500 to propose + 500 to increase the chance of passing the vote).
Those are different things though, increasing the chance of passing the vote does not mean you can include a faction, that costs a separate 500 for the faction to join.
What if we make the fine be "ajusteted for inflation... Retroactively... See how they get scared.No.
Partially because Pirates aren't considered pirates unless they cross systems.
Think of it like crossing state lines to make it a federal charge in America...
Most pirates are smart enough to have thick enough alibis to be seen as quirky merchants with guns.
Everyone dosen't belive it, but the paperwork oftentimes is enough.
unfortunatly no. While Slavers are arrested and the slaves are freed, that legislation to punish them are rather... outdated. fines are to low.
Ships are too cheap and can be easily replaced so taking them away is nothing...
and finally, there is no will in the republic to stop it.
What if we make the fine be "ajusteted for inflation... Retroactively... See how they get scared.
Or pull an al capone and make slaves "ilegal goods" and make them count for "tax evasion reason to audit" suddenly any pirate with a client list or organization found on them is in danger
I won't lie, I did consider if the ROCI would be up to the task, considering how anemic most of the Republic Institutions seem to be. But then again, it is an already existing law enforcement agency of a Galactic government, so most of the framework and procedures should already be there. And between it being a 'request' not a order, and most local governments probably not wanting to invoke it due to justification issues unless there's an emergency, I don't think it should result in too much bloat.As an argument against the right to request investigation law, this puts way more power in the hands of a centralized government but risks massively increasing the burocracy as we'll need people to look through the requests for investigation, people to organize the response, people to handle the logistics. So on and so forth.