When I start thinking of civil rights protests, I immediately think of the American civil rights movement in the 1960s. Protestors often tried to use peaceful means such as public marches or boycotting segregated buses or stores. A lot of people also petitioned the courts and started challenging unfair rulings that were determined on the basis of race.
Im like 98% sure it happened in the US
The concern in some quarters that too many immigrants will change the character of the united states is age old. The United States for an extended period has been a nation of immigrants, and the country has a long history of successfully absorbing people from Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Today, the 41 million people in the U.S. representing 13.1 percent of the U.S. population are immigrants. The successful integration of immigrants and their children had contributed to the economic vitality and towards a vibrant and ever-changing culture in the U.S.
The Indian removal act authorized the president (Andrew Jackson at the time) not to sell the land to the natives, did not forcibly remove them or buy the land from them. We exchanged land with NA, making them move farther west while we took the middle eastern states.
So that being said your answer is B
McChulloch v. Maryland (1819), the Supreme Court ruled that Congress had the implied power to create the Second Bank of the United States, and Maryland could not tax it.