Answer:
The anti-war movement had two main effects on American society. First, the movement helped to erode support for the war. This led to a decrease in American involvement and the eventual withdrawal of US forces in 1973.
Explanation:
A type of political activity which was not the type of activity that the Sons of Liberty took part in prior to the outbreak of the American Revolution is the Stamp Act.
<h3>What is the
Stamp Act?</h3>
The Stamp Act was the first widely known acts of the Sons of Liberty which took place on August 14, 1765. It happened when an effigy of Andrew Oliver, the commissioned Distributor of Stamps for Massachusetts, was found hanging in a tree on Newbury Street, along with a large boot with a devil climbing out of it.
The most famous and major action of the Sons of Liberty which leading up to the Revolutionary War was the Boston Tea Party.
<h3>What is the
Boston Tea Party?</h3>
The Boston Tea Party occurred as a result of taxation without representation. The American colonists trusted that Britain was unfairly taxing them to pay for expenses incurred on the French and Indian War. In protest to a tax on tea, some members boarded trade ships in Boston Harbor and thrown their tea into the water.
Learn more about the Sons of Liberty at: brainly.com/question/857109
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Green which or international meridian is the answer
I can't really answer your question (as I don't really know enough about 18th century France), but I just want to clear up an (understandable) misconception about Feudalism in your question.
The French revolution was adamant and explicit in its abolition of 'feudalism'. However, the 'feudalism' it was talking about had nothing at all to do with medieval 'feudalism' (which, of course, never existed). What the revolutionaries had in mind, in my own understanding of it, was the legally privileged position of the aristocracy/2nd estate. This type of 'feudalism' was a creation of early modern lawyers and, as a result, is better seen as a product of the early-modern monarchical nation-state, than as a precursor to it. It has nothing to do with the pre-nation-state medieval period, or with the Crusades.
Eighteenth-century buffs, feel free to chip in if I've misrepresented anything, as this is mostly coming from my readings about the historiographical development of feudalism, not any revolutionary France expertise, so I may well have misinterpreted things.