Answer:
The answer is c.
Step-by-step explanation:
During World war I congress passed a espionage act which prohibited individuals from being disloyal to the Wilson administration to be drafted for the war. Some people dissented on this act because it placed undue restrictions on individual liberties. However, after the war, the supreme court upheld the government's restrictions on individual liberties on the grounds that the war posed a clear danger to national security. Thus, the supreme court upheld sentencing on people who were convicted of protesting against these policies during the war.