He was paranoid. He was constantly in fear of how he could control this vast new territory with so many cultures and so many different groups of people," she says. And he feared the inkbrush as much as the sword.
hope it helps u
Answer:
Though President Wilson firmly believed in an international body to conduct the matters of conflict between different nations by peace talks and his 'Fourteen Points' were influential in the foundation of the League of Nations, he could not rally the United States to be a member of League of Nations. Opposition came from the isolationist section who considers that Article Ten could draw the United States again into international war. Article ten required the members of the League to defend an attack on any of its member from any external threat.
B And C go with 1st Amendment . Also A and D go with Journalism Standards.