It was James Otis.
He staged a play that spoke out against the injustices that indigenous peoples of Kenya suffered at the hands of postcolonial society.
it raised the amount of tax placed on molasses
Sir Charles Tupper, Louis Riel, Samuel Leonard Tilley, and James Colledge Pope, to name some.
The Jacobins. The Reign was mostly controlled by Maximilien Robespierre and, in the begining, Georges Danton, but he was killed by Robespierre after he spoke out against him.
He spoke French, but also spoke Italian and English fluently.
James Otis
James Otis
French socialist Harold A. Lawrence was jailed in the 1775 after he spoke out against the Revolutionary War.
You'll need to specify - Charles Who
boycott
no, everybody, loved it and had a great time with it :]]
Multiple-choice questions don't work without the list of choices.
* It was Patrick Henry. I am absolutely sure.
He wasn't against the patriots, he was a patriot. He argued that Great Britian was unfairly taxing the colonies without their consent. Examples are the Sugar Act, Stamp Act, and Tonwshend Act.
The Sugar Act
Patriots spoke agenst him!!
The Sedition Act of 1918 allowed the government to imprison people who spoke out against the government. It was repealed in 1920.