Answer:
A) One specific example from the life of Nelson Mandela that indicates that he would have agreed with King's statement is that he protested apartheid in South Africa by leading non-violent protests.
B) One specific example from the life of Mahatma Gandhi that indicates that he would have agreed with King's statement is that he traveled India to protest the British rule peacefully. He advocated for the civil rights of Indians through speech and his travel.
C) Another specific example from the life of Mahatma Gandhi that indicates that he would have agreed with King's statement is that Gandhi led boycotts of British goods that acted as civil disobedience to protest peacefully.
Explanation:
You didn't give us a list of choices, but there's really just one choice. The Athenians big meeting for discussing laws was called the Assembly. Well, actually, in Greek (their language) it was called the "Ecclesia (<span>ἐκκλησία). </span> Etymologically, that means the "called out" ones. Or we might say the ones called together, to gather together. The Assembly was open to all male citizens, and could have several thousand people participating in such a meeting (out of the total citizen population of perhaps around 50,000).
By the way, the same term "ecclesia" was used by Christians later as the name for their gatherings, so in religious circles "ecclesia" (assembly) came to be synonymous with the word "church."
OPTION 3: In 1856, John C. Frémont won eleven northern states on an anti-slavery p.
The Republican party that had originated from a firm political stance against slavery in 1854, nominated John C. Frémont for the 1856 presidential elections.
Even though Frémont didn't gain the elections, he won votes of 11 of the 16 Northern states, unifying the electorate of the Northern and Western states against the Southern states (states in favor of slavery) for the first time in American history.