'For Thine is the Kingdom, and the Power, and the Glory forever.' Amen And divorce
It's not religion, as the media says, but politics. Most Protestants consider themselves British or Loyalist (loyal to the crown), most Catholics Nationalist (want Ireland to be one nation) Many Catholics believe that Protestants opressed them and groups such as the IRA fought against the protestant government in England as they want to be ruled by Dublin in the Republic of Ireland. Protestant groups such as the UDA and UVF fought to defend the union as they are loyal to the crown. In the 1990s a peace process started and things are much improved now, with both sides working together.
The tricolor flag of the Republic of Ireland has three colors. Green, white, and orange. There are different ways to look at it. In general, green represnts the Catholics in Ireland and orange represents the Protestants. And white represnts peace. Others see green to represent the native Gaelic people and their traditions and orange represents any foreign influence for example Protestants (or to be a little more specific Anglican Protestant). And white represents peace again. Either way the flag signifies that their has been enough bloodshed and between the two sides and there shall be peace between them in the "new" Republic of Ireland.
There are economic discrepancies between the two groups. There is also discrimination against Catholics in Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland is officially part of the U.K. and the U.K. sends military and police aid to keep the political status quo. The Protestants are mostly pro-U.K. The Catholics mostly are not. Human rights groups have extensively documented the human rights abuses by the U.K. against political prisoners, mostly Catholic. Many innocent people are killed and disfigured by political violence. Both sides commit human rights abuses, but the abuses on the part of the U.K. outnumber those on the part of the I.R.A. (Irish Republican Army, guerrilla group). Power and economic discrepancies form the root of most wars. Lack of democratic control over leaders is also a factor.
A parallelogram can have adjacent sides and angles which are different. A square cannot.
truce.
Area you multiply 2 sides and perimeter you add all the sides together.
Historically, religious conflict in Australia has consisted of tension between Catholics, mainly of Irish origin, and Protestants. While this rarely erupted into violence, the two communities tended to see themselves as different. The Catholics tended towards lower socio-economic status and voted overwhelmingly for the Australian Labor Party. Protestant political affiliations were split, but the majority voted for the conservative parties, which after World War II were the Liberal Party and the Country Party (later National Party). Many influential Protestants were members of Masonic lodges. Even the school system tended to exacerbate the sectarian differences so that many children had little chance to get to understand the other point of view, because most Catholic children attended Catholic schools and most Protestant children attended state-funded public schools. One of the key events that broke down this sectarian conflict was the split in the Australian Labor Party, which resulted in many Catholics supporting the newly-formed Democratic Labor Party and eventually drifting to the Liberal Party. The Liberal Party began to take notice of Catholics and include them and the Catholic views in its policy-making process. At the same time, the Australian Labor Party began to attract more Protestants, in order to remain an alternative government. One way or another, conflict between Catholics and Protestants came to en end in the latter part of the twentieth century. The principal current religious dispute in Australia is between Christians and Muslims. Again, it rarely results in violence, and again it results from a lack of communication between the two sides. Really, the underlying differences are not so much about religion but ethnicity, with religion being a convenient label for immigrant communities.
Almost solidly Roman Catholic. The second largest is Islam (6%) Very small minorities of Jews, Protestants and Anglicans. Hinduism and Sikhism are growing but are not recognised by the Government, but it does not deny them the right to practise Same as everywhere, catholics , protestants , Jews , everything
In a rhombus each of the sides is of the same length whereas in a parallelogram, each pair of opposite sides is of the same length but the two pairs are different.
The conflict is primarily between the religious factions, Catholic and Protestant. Since it remained part of the UK, Northern Ireland has a history of Protestant domination in government and the economy. This friction has been expressed several times in violence and terrorism on both sides. The Nationalists continue to seek a union of the six Northern Ireland counties with larger Ireland, which is Catholic.
two sides of a rhombus are slanted /"_"/ kind of like that
The answer depends on two side's what!If you meant two sides, then there are infinitely many quadrilaterals - each different angle between the sides will give a different shape.