The correct answer is:  
B.The Tammany Hall bosses tried to bribe him and threatened his life.
Thomas Nast rose to fame in the late 1860s when his satirical comics led directly to the arrest of Boss Tweed, for the corrupted “Tweed Ring” he ran in New York City bribing city officials, rigging elections, and corrupting the judiciary.
Tweed attempted to bribe Nast offering him up to $500,000 to study art in Europe. Failing to bribe Nast, Tweed threatened to have the Board of Elections boycott Harper’s books, where Nast worked, but the magazine´s board chose to support the cartoonist depicting Tweed as a thief.
 
        
                    
             
        
        
        
<span>Employees in France have less motivating force to rapidly look for another position when they are out of a current job position since their joblessness benefits are significantly higher. The mentality is simple "who wants to look for another job when fired when you can get enough money to take care of your daily needs even as an unemployed person with unemployment benefits".Because of this, the government of France does everything it can with regard to labor to make sure that everything is balanced.</span>
        
             
        
        
        
Freight train . Sorry if I’m wrong
        
             
        
        
        
whats described in the box??