Answer:
There is no way to say rather or not someone will regret a life choice, later on, even if don't regret it after making the decision. But one way is before doing anything, is to think it through. For how every long it takes. Ask yourself, "Is this really best for me?", "How will this choice affect others around me?", "Is this really helpful in the long run"?. Asking questions like these, may just help come to a decision. If you decided this is certain choice is the BEST for you. Then you should go for it. While you can't be promised you won't come to regret the decision, it you feel good about it and have thought about long-term consequences you should do what feels best.
The sentence that does not contain misplaced or dangling modifiers is <span> B.
Sitting in a chair, I looked at the clouds on the porch.</span>
Answer:
Malcolm X was a radical black power leader whose prominent role in the Nation of Islam was highly controversial. He justified the use of power to liberate blacks from their second-class status because of the historical failure of peaceful attempts previously.
He was raised in a neighborhood and a climate of violence; he saw less issue with taking it up in the name of a rightful cause. And this is definitely arguable, although personally I think he was in the right as well. MLK Jr had a bigger perspective, and Malcolm X could only remember the past and think back to its failures: think about Booker T's Atlanta Compromise in comparison with WEB DuBois.