Well, the whole reason why Galileo had been treated so badly by the Catholic Church was because his findings contradicted the established Church canon. Galileo was questioning the Church, and, therefore, the Pope. And the Pope was seen as God's representative on Earth. So, for Galileo to question the Pope, it was like he was questioning God, and that's a big no-no with the Catholic Church.
Later, Pope John Paul admitted that the Church's treatment of Galileo had been unfair. That, in doing so, the Church had attempted to censor science itself. And you don't censor science!
Cause that's just not cool :)
for encouraging people not to serve in the military
Schenek protested the US entry into World War I by standing in public areas and handing out pamphlets encouraging citizens to stay out of the war and not to participate.
The Supreme Court ruled Schenek was not protected by free speech because his actions hurt the security of the US. This case set the precedent that a person could not use the First Amendment to protect speech or rights to assembly if their actions could be viewed as a security risk. Because he was encouraging people to not sign up for war during a time of war, it was viewed as a threat to US security.
B and C are reasons the german leaders were unhappy with the treaty ultimately setting the stage for Hitler to take power claiming to the german people he would do more and restore germany to their greatness
Answer:
I think that the answer is a