No, unless you register to vote in New York.
The essence of non-violent technique is that it seeks to liquidate antagonisms but not the antagonists.
<span>Gandhi</span>
<span>This is what he said!</span>
<span>The answer is mobility.
Trench warfare was popular at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century, Trenches, essentially large ditches men dug, and then took up defensive positions in, were very good at giving soldiers a place to hide from incoming automatic weapons fire and mortar strikes.
This however gave birth to "trench warfare", a style of combat relying on melee combat, short range weapons like shotguns, and worst of all, penetrating attacks the trenches couldn't protect from, such as shrapnel heavy grenades, flamethrowers, or even chemical weapon attacks.
Trench warfare was also terrible as the living conditions in the trenches often involved standing water, disease, and malnutrition.</span>
Thomas Gibbons was allowed to operate his steamboats in New York. It was a case when a historic point choice in which the Supreme Court of the United States held that the ability to manage interstate trade, allowed to Congress by the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution, enveloped the ability to direct route.
In general, the best option from this list would be "radicals" on the liberal end of the spectrum, but it should be noted that radicals can exist on both ends of the political spectrum.