Answer:
d. Churchill and Stalin became allies.
Explanation:
- 4/23/1941 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain Winston Churchill sends a letter to the Prime Minister of the USSR, Joseph Stalin, informing him that the German Government is preparing an attack on the USSR.
- July 18, 1941 USSR Prime Minister Joseph Stalin sent a letter to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Winston Churchill: demanded that the United Kingdom open a second front in the west (in northern France) and in northern Europe (in the Arctic).
- 7/20/1941 Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain Winston Churchill replies to the Prime Minister of the USSR, Joseph Stalin, that the Germans have 40 divisions in France and that the British have no opportunity to open another front in either France or the Arctic.
- September 15, 1941 USSR Prime Minister Joseph Stalin sent a letter to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain, Winston Churchill, requesting that the United Kingdom open a second front in the West or send twenty-five to thirty divisions via the Archangel or Iran .
- October 25, 1941 US Prime Minister Winston Churchill, through the British Ambassador to Moscow, informs USSR Prime Minister Joseph Stalin that the UK has no possibility of sending 25-30 Divisions through the USSR Archangel or Iran.
- August 12, 1942 Multi-day talks (Moscow Conference) begin between the Prime Minister of the USSR, Joseph Stalin, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Averell Harriman, US Presidential Envoy discussing general plans for future federal operations.
<span>Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted</span>
<span>Freedom of speech is a bellweather: how any society tolerates those with minority, disfavored, or even obnoxious views will often speak to its performance on human rights more generally. In international law, access to information and free expression are two sides of the same coin, and both have found tremendous accelerators in the Internet and other forms of digital communication. At the same time, efforts to control speech and information are also accelerating, by both governments and private actors in the form of censorship, restrictions on access, and violent acts directed against those whose views or queries are seen as somehow dangerous or wrong. From our earliest days, when we were called The Fund for Free Expression, we have fought all forms of repression of speech, in all media, around the globe.</span>
Slaves were punished by whipping, shackling, hanging, beating, burning, mutilation, branding, and imprisonment. Punishment was often meted out in response to disobedience or perceived infractions, but sometimes abuse was performed to re-assert the dominance of the master (or overseer) over the slave.
For your question the answer is rome because r<span>ome became a great Mediterranean power as a direct result of the Punic wars.
Hope this helps:)</span>