The Christian Seventh-Day Adventist church fought for the nations civil and religious freedom in the year 1888 and they continue to stand for the 1st amendment and separation of church and state. Read the book "National Sunday Law" for more information. Seventh-Day Adventists, as well as other religions, are entitled to their freedom of religion under the Bill of Rights. Furthermore gun owners have been trying to maintain their rights to own a firearm. They are entitled to that right under the Second amendment in the Bill of Rights.
Since they viewed it as a great way to 'decrease the surplus population', having a different, more sympathetic outlook would have helped. Giving them food they could cook and eat would also have helped: the Irish had a lot of trouble trying to prepare and eat the Indian meal they sent. They could also have opened more soup kitchens, told the landlords to show a little leniency and stop evicting people because heir livelihoods were gone and their means of paying rent with them. But they wanted to get rid of the Irish, and so they did. There was a famine in the Scottish Highlands in 1846 and because of charitable efforts nowhere near as many people died. They could have saved them by showing charity, but they didn't.
It ended the one-party system. It consolidated power among a few key leaders. It ended the revolution. It lessened the power of the president.
Some Germans were willing to use force to gain rights and freedoms.
Answer:
These are, in alphabetical order: Adventist, Anglican, Baptist, Calvinist (Reformed), Lutheran, Methodist and Pentecostal.:
Explantion
So it would be C