The Anti-imperialist league formed to fight U.S. annexation of the Philippines, citing a variety of reasons ranging from the economic to the legal to the racial to the moral. It included among its members such notables as Andrew Carnegie, Mark Twain, William James, David Starr Jordan, and Samuel Gompers with George S. Boutwell, former secretary of the Treasury and Massachusetts, as its president. Following the signing of the Treaty of Paris, the league began to decline and eventually disappeared.
<span>It was passed in 1701 to resolve the issue of succession to
the English and Irish thrones of the Electress Sophia of Hanover and her successors
who are non-Catholics. This act was pressed by the inability of King Wiliam III
and Queen Mary II as well as Queen Anne who was Mary’s sister to give birth to
an heir. Sophia’s line was Protestant
her son became King George I and started the Hanoverian Dynasty. This happened after
the death of Queen Anne in August 1714.
The act played an important role in the establishment of a King of Great
Britain, England and Scotland that now had a shared ruler since 1603 but
continued as individual governing countries.</span>
I'd say it's answer a) but i'm not so sure
That's hard to say, but if Germany decided not to fight a two-front war, World War ll definitely would have continued for a longer period of time. Russia and Germany signed a Non-Aggression Pact in which they promised never to invade one another, but Hitler went back on his promise and sent troops to attack Russia. Big mistake. Despite studying Napoleon and his defeat in Russia, Hitler still decided to invade and was caught off guard by the Russian winter. Germany lost thousands of soldiers to illness and frostbite and exhausted all of their supplies and to top that off Germany suffered a huge loss at the Battle of Stalingrad and surrendered in 1943. If these events hadn't occurred, the probability of the Axis Powers winning WWll would have been much greater, or the Allied may not have won by such a large margin.