<span>In the past, a time "lag" prevented readers and writers from getting to know world literature.</span>
Answer:
facts brah. it keeps messing up my stats
Explanation:
A) It uses the same language, but frames women being oppressed by men instead of the 13 colonies being oppressed by the British.
This is the best answer to the question. The passage lists all of the ways in which men have oppressed women using the same language as the Declaration of Independence. This is most obvious when it says "he has taxed her to support a government which recognizes her only when her property can be made profitable to it."
No where in the text does it show that men are standing up for women. It also doesn't say anything about joining forces or that there are injustices being done to both men and women. The passage also doesn't call for men and women to separate into their own countries.