If I'm fighting a war primarily with my Air Force (Starfleet), ten thousand additional pilots aren't going to do me a lot of good if I don't have ten thousand planes for them to fly.
But if you also have two hundred thousand aircraft production workers, workers who are being exposed to the particles, that means healthier workers, harder working workers, fewer sick days, more voluntary overtime. After a certain time period, you'll have a younger workforce too.
George Bush can almost unilaterally give his go ahead on an invasion of another country ...
Congressional authorizations for military action in Iraq was on October 16, 2002, Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 Public Law 107-243, authorizing the commander in chief to take the country to war. Operation Iraqi Freedom began on March 20, 2003.
The Constitution gives Congress the power to authorized war, so if by "almost unilaterally" you mean President Bush obtained authorization from both chambers of Congress five months before the invasion, then yes, it was "almost unilaterally."
And by "alleged," does that mean a direct quote?
No, briefly setting aside the fact that it's a Federation planet. The Federation wanted to remove (relocate) the Baku so that they would not be killed when the particle ring was harvested, the procedure was going to heat the surface to fatal levels.
The US deported over 287,000 people out of America last year, none of them were US citizens. The Baku were on a Federation planet.
Yeah and once they pretty much renonced their citizenship (Hey, DS9 you forgot that part didn't you.) the feds stopped trying to move them as they no longer had that authority and the Cardassians didn't seem to mind.
Not quite, Picard stopped the relocation once Gul Evek agreed to allow the Indians to stay. The Indians giving up their citizenship was the key to Gul Evek's decision, not Picard's, the Indians were agreeing to immigrate to the Cardassian Union. Once the new boarder was established, the Indian were going to be under Cardassian jurisdiction.
If the Indians had renouced their citizenship, but Gul Evek refused to allow them to stay, then per the treaty and his orders, Picard would have had to remove them.
"... your orders will be to remove them by whatever means are necessary."
The aboriginals moved away from the Federation long ago, how are they still Federation citizens and how does the Federation have power them when they no longer in the Federation's territory?
If a US citizen moves to a foreign country and lives there for years, unless they renounce their American citizenship, or become a citizen of that foreign country, then they would continue to be solely a American citizen. And their government would still have some level of control over their movements.
The Indians built a colony on a planet, whose "ownership" was "disputed.
Prior to the agreed upon boarder's establishment, the Indians planet (AIUI) was still in "international waters," in six weeks it would be inside the Cardassian Union. Strictly speaking, the planet was never inside the Federation.