Question
Why were nonviolent Catholic nationalists overlooked during The Troubles?(1 point)
Nonviolent Catholic nationalists gained supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists gained supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. Once the IRA gained attention, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. Once the IRA gained attention, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists gained supporters after the violent response of the Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. After the IRA gained attention, however, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance.
Nonviolent Catholic nationalists gained supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists gained supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. They merged with the IRA soon after, creating a single nationalist organization in Northern Ireland that was nonviolent. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. Once the IRA gained attention, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. Once the IRA gained attention, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance. Nonviolent Catholic nationalists gained supporters after the violent response of the Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. After the IRA gained attention, however, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
Nonviolent Catholic nationalists lost supporters after the violent response of Protestant counterprotestors in 1969. Once the IRA gained attention, most viewed all Catholic nationalists as IRA members, regardless of their actual allegiance.