Harthill Loyalist Flute Band @ Uefa Cup Final
- Length: 1:16
- Rating Average: 4.80 from 93 people
- View Count: 86011' favoriteCount='234
- Author: Willso86
Tags: Band Cup Final Flute Harthill Loyalist Rangers Uefa
Manchester 2008 Rangers v Zenit St. Peterburg
greatest loyalist video ever
- Length: 2:31
- Rating Average: 4.01 from 347 people
- View Count: 191668' favoriteCount='676
- Author: billyred1
Tags: longkesh loyalist lpow uda ulster uvf
loyalists uda/uvf h8 c wing long kesh celebrating 300th anniversary of the battle of the boyne.
Black Loyalist
- Length: 3:55
- Rating Average: 4.29 from 7 people
- View Count: 4898' favoriteCount='11
- Author: fraserfraze
Tags: artist Black Freedom Freedomsong Loyalist Peters Reggae Shabaka Thomas
A man retraces his steps of his ancestors, through the eyes of an old spirit..."Thomas Peters" Shabaka is a reggae artist.
Paki Loyalist
- Length: 3:27
- Rating Average: 3.59 from 214 people
- View Count: 100954' favoriteCount='333
- Author: johnnycityman
Tags: Loyalist
Singing in the Golden Last Benidorm
Second Life Loyalist College Canadian Border Simulation
- Length: 1:33
- Rating Average: 4.36 from 11 people
- View Count: 3664' favoriteCount='19
- Author: VWDC
Tags: border canadian college education life loyalist play role second simulation training virtual world
Loyalist College Border Service students participate in a simulated Canadian border crossing using Second Life - created by the Virtual World Design Centre, Loyalist College, Belleville, Ontario.
Loyalist - Fathers Advice
- Length: 3:21
- Rating Average: 3.92 from 213 people
- View Count: 119501' favoriteCount='361
- Author: calumgil
Tags: Advice Fathers Glasgow Loyalist Rangers RHC UVF YCV
Brilliant Loyalist Tune about the YCV
Dave Nachmanoff and Al Stewart - The Loyalist
- Length: 5:4
- Rating Average: 4.75 from 8 people
- View Count: 2165' favoriteCount='4
- Author: davenach
Tags: al dave electric folk nachmanoff philosophical poet rock songwriter stewart
Here's a free track preview of Dave Nachmanoff and Al Stewart's song, "The Loyalist", from Dave's "A Certain Distance" CD. For more info on Dave see www.davenach.com. Singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist Dave Nachmanoff saw Al Stewart live for the first time at Royal Albert Hall in London in 1985 and in 2006 came back and performed with him. At the age of ten he played with Libba Cotton ("Freight Train"). He's led songwriting workshops for German school children, synagogue groups, a Native American tribe, stroke survivors, and for the Silcocks, a family with 44 adopted boys. In addition, he's a heckofa songwriter in styles ranging from folk to pop who's sold over 15,000 recordings. He's a father of two and writes custom songs for weddings and other special occasions. As a side player (guitar, piano, bass, accordion and more) he's worked with Stewart on a regular basis, as well as many others at venues as far ranging as The Bottom Line and the Edmonton Folk Festival. Oh, and he's got a doctorate in Philosophy. That he earned in his spare time. Dave grew up in the 60'and 70's surrounded by the active folk scene of northern Virginia and Washington DC and inspired by Pete Seeger, country rock, early revival folk like the Kingston Trio and later on, 80's new wave. Toss in a bit of celtic folk-rock a la Fairport Convention and it's clear how he got his rich melodic sound. His latest effort, "Time Before the Fall" offers a diverse palate of genres, from the traditional English ballad style "Midnight Sea" to the folk-pop of "Lucky." There are just enough hooky guitar licks on these songs to make you smile but not so much that they distract from the wonderful stories and out of the ordinary characters. There's the guy who brightens a city corner with flowers in the upbeat "George's Corner" and a man who remorsefully reports his brother's activities to the authorities in "Judas Kiss." He's got eight albums in all, including his first, Candy Shower, released in 1997. Plans are in the works for a new release in the next year. With a personable style that's adaptable to a variety of stages, he looks larger than life although he's a vertically challenged five foot two (and no, he doesn't have blue eyes). He's that neighbor who always has a friendly wave but doesn't keep you from dinner. You'll probably forget about that meal anyway when he starts to tell his stories and sing his well-crafted tunes in a voice like an older Rob Thomas (Matchbox 20) but a guitar style that's more Mark Knopfler or Richard Thompson. And just as versatile too. He's shared the stage with Cheryl Wheeler, Steve Forbert, The Pogues, America, Alison Krause and many more. If you're looking for a unique gift or a way to celebrate your wedding or other important event, ask Dave about writing you a custom song. It'll be much more appreciated than another blender and it'll be remembered for years. Just send him a few details and he'll take it from there, writing the entire song, recording it and sending you the CD. Or, if you'd rather take a more active role, you can write and/or record the song with Dave. Just Plain Folks honored him with the 2001 Songwriter of the Year award. For five consecutive years he was the Susan Lucci of the South Florida Folk Festival, earning a place as a finalist before winning Best Overall in 2002. SingOut! has praised his "... heartfelt, inspired songwriting ... with a delivery both biting and assured." Al Stewart (born Alastair Ian Stewart on 5 September 1945), is a British singer-songwriter and musician. He is best known for his 1976 single "Year of the Cat" and its 1978 follow-up "Time Passages" (both of which were produced by Alan Parsons). Stewart grew up in the coastal resort town of Bournemouth, Dorset, England. He moved to the United States in 1977 and recorded/produced most of his work in Los Angeles during the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s. While studio albums are now few and far between, he still tours extensively throughout the United States and Europe. Recordings of concerts are often made available through his fan clubs. Stewart's career in music has spanned over 40 years.
Loyalist - Belfast - U.D.A & U.F.F
- Length: 4:39
- Rating Average: 3.87 from 179 people
- View Count: 74060' favoriteCount='251
- Author: CaptainBlack999uda
Tags: belfast fighting ira ireland londonderry loyalist protestant shankill trouble uda uff ulster uvf vigilantie violence war
UDA and UFF from 69 to the present day.Song of a Loyalist album from the early 70's
Bush 'Loyalist' Oversaw Iraq Deaths Survey
- Length: 2:39
- Rating Average: 5.00 from 29 people
- View Count: 2040' favoriteCount='13
- Author: CapitalistHolocaust
Tags: 9/11 america bush casualties death george iran iraq mcain obama terrorism toll war
The WHO Iraq Family Health Survey - which estimated the deaths in Iraq at only 151,000 - was not an independent study. It was carried out on behalf of the World Health Organization, by the Iraqi Ministry of Health which (although ran by Iraqi Dr Salih al-Hasnawi) is overseen & advised by the American & Bush 'loyalist' James K.Haveman Jnr. The guy originally sent to oversee the Iraqi healthcare system; Frederick M Burkle Jr. was sacked, because (as senior USAID officials told him) the White House wanted a 'loyalist' on the job. The Iraqi Ministry of Health was trying to keep an accurate account on the death tolls using morgue records, but were pressured to stop by the U.S. puppet government in Iraq. ******************************** Washington Post article about Burkle & Haveman: "That's what happened with James K. Haveman Jr., who was selected to oversee the rehabilitation of Iraq's health care system. Haveman, a 60-year-old social worker, was largely unknown among international health experts, but he had connections. He had been the community health director for the former Republican governor of Michigan, John Engler, who recommended him to Paul D. Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense." "Haveman replaced Frederick M. Burkle Jr., a physician with a master's degree in public health and postgraduate degrees from Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth and the University of California at Berkeley" "But a week after Baghdad's liberation, Burkle was informed he was being replaced. A senior official at USAID sent Burkle an e-mail saying the White House wanted a "loyalist" in the job. Burkle had a wall of degrees, but he didn't have a picture with the president." ** Washinton Post Rajiv Chandrasekaran Sunday, September 17, 2006 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/16/AR2006091600193_4.html ******************************** In fact, according the British National Newspaper, The Guardian, Burkle thought that the Baltimore/Lancet figure may have underestimated the civilian death tolls: One expert also believes the number of civilian casualties may be higher than the Baltimore/Lancet figure. Frederick "Skip" Burkle is a professor in the department of public health and epidemiology at Harvard University who ran Iraq's ministry of health after the war but was sacked by the US and replaced by a Bush loyalist. He says the survey ignored the occupation's indirect or secondary casualties - deaths caused by the destruction of health services, unemployment and lack of electricity. Two surveys by non-government organisations found a rise in infant mortality and malnutrition, he notes, so why are those figures not reflected in the second study that appeared in the Lancet? http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/19/iraq ******************************** According to the same article, the U.S. puppet Iraqi government pressured the Ministry of Health to stop counting deaths from morgue records: "There is no shortage of estimates, but they vary enormously. The Iraqi ministry of health initially tried to keep a count based on morgue records but then stopped releasing figures under pressure from the US-supported government in the Green Zone. The director of the Baghdad morgue, already under stress because of the mounting horror of his work, was threatened with death on the grounds that by publishing statistics he was causing embarrassment. The families of the bereaved wanted him to tell the truth, but like other professionals he came to the view that he had to flee Iraq. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/mar/19/iraq ******************************** James K. Haveman Jr., BL (Bush Loyalist) Senior Advisor to Iraqi Ministry of Health http://www.whitehouse.gov/government/haveman-bio.html Frederick "Skip" M. Burkle, Jr., MD, MPH http://www.hhi.harvard.edu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=114 How the New England Journal of Medicine Undercounted Iraqi Civilian Deaths http://www.counterpunch.org/andrew01122008.html
Loyalist College Athletics
- Length: 0:29
- Rating Average: from people
- View Count: 632' favoriteCount='1
- Author: goloyalist
Tags: athletics college fitness loyalist recreation sports
A short promotional video showcasing Loyalist College varsity and recreational athletics.
Page: 1 of 635