Brutus believed that killing Mark Antony would be unnecessary and potentially counterproductive to their cause. He argued that eliminating Antony could provoke further conflict and chaos, as Antony was not as dangerous as Julius Caesar, whom they had already assassinated. Brutus felt that allowing Antony to live would help maintain their moral high ground and avoid the appearance of tyranny. Ultimately, he prioritized the broader goal of restoring the Republic over personal vendettas.
imperialism
I suspect that your examiner wants you to choose one of a series of possible statements, in which case we obviously cannot help you, since we don't know what they are.
They would oppose the idea
the original idea was that it was a mercy to them, rather than letting them starve to death.
The conspirators in Act II Scene 1 talk about killing Caesar of course, but Cassius also wants to kill Mark Antony at the same time. Brutus, however, nixes the idea as overkill.
imperialism
Imperialism
yes
Imperialism
I suspect that your examiner wants you to choose one of a series of possible statements, in which case we obviously cannot help you, since we don't know what they are.
They would oppose the idea
He read about it in a biographical book called Plutarch's Lives.
Yes, -cide is the suffix. It adds the idea of killing or a killing agent.
No. It's a terrible idea.
yes
John C. Calhoun