The conclusion that we can draw is that a. Twain believed the United States did not have a right to the territories it held overseas.
<h3>What were Twain's views on imperialism?</h3><h3 />
The relevant excerpt is not attached but the answer can be inferred based on Twain's historical views.
Mark Twain was against American imperialism and believed that the U.S. should not inflict upon others, what the British had inflicted on them.
He would therefore most likely believe that the U.S. did not have a right to the foreign lands it possessed.
Find out more on Mark Twain at brainly.com/question/11926015.
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Freedom of speech :) (and religion and press) i needed more letters lol
<span>It's not clear, but we know he was killed in the Battle of Mactan. By exactly who we don't know, because initial news reports that came out were sketchy. But the killing was generally attributed to Magellan even though there were no witnesses to verify that, simply because he was the leader of the visiting team.
That's what i found after a little google assistance.</span>
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
doing the lesson right now on edge