Details on the music, readings, and eulogies for Jack Layton's funeral

 

This just out from the NDP:


SATURDAY, AUGUST 27                                                                                                              TORONTO
9:00 am – 11:00 am    Public Visitation, Toronto City Hall

1:15 pm (approx) Procession to Roy Thomson Hall
Horse-mounted police will lead procession, followed by pipe and drum bands and an honour guard. They will proceed south along Bay Street, turning right on King Street and left on Simcoe Street, arriving at Roy Thomson Hall, 60 Simcoe Street.
2:00 pm                       Jack Layton's Celebration of Life
2500 people expected to gather in Roy Thomson Hall, with more in overflow areas outside of the Hall. Four large video screens will be set up in David Pecaut Square, to the west of Roy Thomson Hall, for overflow crowds.
ORDER OF SERVICE:

Samuel Barber, Adagio for Strings G.F. Handel, Pifa from Messiah
Members of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra

Into the Mystic – Van Morrison
Richard Underhill

Magnificat – J.S. Bach
Richard Underhill

Processional
The Choir of the Metropolitan Community Church of Toronto

O Canada
Joy Klopp

Aboriginal Blessing
Shawn Atleo

Welcome / Bienvenue
Rev. Brent Hawkes
Anne McGrath

Philippians 2
Nycole Turmel

Isaiah 57-5
Myer Siemiatycki

Qu’ran 2:153
Tasleem Riaz

Croire
Martin Deschamps

Video
“Together, we’ll change the world”

Eulogy
Stephen Lewis
Karl Belanger
Mike and Sarah Layton

Hallelujah
Steven Page

Homily
Rev. Brent Hawkes

Rise Up
Lorraine Segato

Benediction
Rev. Brent Hawkes

Get Together
Julie Michels

Hymn to Freedom
Chris Dawes

In keeping with Layton's wishes, the program ends with a chance for those assembled to write down something they will do to make our world a better place.

And here is the list of pallbearers, courtesy of the Department of Canadian Heritage:

The Honourable Ed Broadbent, P.C., C.C., Former Leader of the federal New Democratic Party and former Member of Parliament 
Alexa McDonough, O.C., Former Leader of the federal New Democratic Party and former Member of Parliament 
Gary Doer, O.M., Ambassador of Canada to the USA, former Premier of Manitoba 
The Honourable Roy Romanow, P.C., O.C., Q.C., S.O.M., M.L.A., Former Premier of Saskatchewan 
Ms. Marilyn Churley, Former Member of Provincial Parliament for Toronto-Danforth and Cabinet Minister 
Mr. Bob Gallagher, Former Chief of Staff to the Honourable Jack Layton 
Professor Tim Flannery, Internationally acclaimed scientist, explorer, conservationist and activist 
Mr. Ken Neumann, National Director for Canada, United Steelworkers 
Dr. Winnie Ng, CAW-Sam Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy at Ryerson University in Toronto 
The Honourable Audrey McLaughlin, P.C., O.C., Former Leader of the federal New Democratic Party and former Member of Parliament 
The Honourable Greg Selinger, M.L.A., Premier of Manitoba 
The Honourable Darrell Dexter, M.L.A., Premier of Nova Scotia 
Ms. Joy McPhail, Former Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia and Cabinet Minister 
Professor Charles Taylor, C.C., G.O.Q., FRSC, Professor Emeritus at McGill University and acclaimed Canadian philosopher 
Mr. Brad Lavigne, Principal Secretary to the Leader of the Official Opposition 
Mr. Jamey Heath, Former Research and Communications Director of the New Democratic Party

 

The Bells of Parliament Hill ring out for Jack Layton

This just in, the music programme today on Parliament Hill as Jack Layton final few hours lying in state in the foyer of the House of Commons:

Today Dr. Andrea McCrady, Dominion Carillonneur, will be playing the following program to commemorate the late Honourable Jack Layton, Leader of the Official Opposition.

She will be playing the 53 bells of the Carillon.

11:30 a.m. – noon: Fanfare for the Common Man, by Aaron Copland, arranged for carillon duet by Andrea McCrady (Andrea McCrady, primo; Jonathan Hebert, secondo)

Hymn: St. Anne (O God, our help in ages past, our hope for years to come), arranged by Leen ‘t Hart

Hymn: Michael (All my hope on God is founded), arranged by John Courter

Song Without Words: “Consolation”, by Felix Mendelssohn, arranged by Don Cook

Hymn: We Shall Overcome, arranged by Milford Myhre

St. Louis Blues, by W. C. Handy, arranged by Randolph Philbrook & Sally Slade Warner

Andante cantabile, carillon duet by Ronald Barnes (Andrea McCrady, primo; Jonathan Hebert, secondo)

Dominion March, by Phillip Layton, arranged by Andrea McCrady (Phillip Layton was Jack’s grandfather)

2 p.m., following 15-gun salute:O Canada

Imagine, by John Lennon, arranged by Andrea McCrady

Dominion March, by Phillip Layton, arranged by Andrea McCrady (Phillip Layton was Jack’s grandfather)

Some remarks about the Thursday morning program: Dr. Andrea McCrady is the Dominion Carillonneur.  For the duets, she will be playing with student Jonathan Hebert.  Dr. McCrady thought Jack would have appreciated having a musician from the “next generation” participating in this recital.

The hymns prominently feature the word “hope” in their lyrics.

The final numbers on the the Air Force's Afghanistan activity

AR2011 0294 008
Mission Transition Task Force Commander Brigadier-General Charles Lamarre and his Command Team, load themselves into a CH-147 Chinook helicopter to conduct a flyover of Kandahar Province on 22 July 2011.
The Mission Transition Task Force is comprised of approximately 1,000 personnel of all ranks that will be responsible to conduct mission closure of Operation ATHENA in order to enable the Canadian Forces to transition to subsequent operations as directed by the Government of Canada. Photos by: MCpl Dan Shouinard, Senior Imagery Technician, Mission Transition Task Force © 2011 DND-MDN Canada

While the Canadian Army was (and will continue to be) the focus of our military activity in Afghanistan, we should also note that the Royal Canadian Air Force (are we using that term now/yet?) also played a significant role, particularly the transport squadrons. Early on, some wished we had more air assets, particularly helicopters, in Afghanistan to move move troops and materiel about the country and help them avoid the IED perils on Afghanistan's roads.

The Canadian Forces notes today that air operations by Joint Task Force Afghanistan's Air Wing have now officially ended. In a release, Lt-Gen Marc Lessard noted that “it was the first military formation of its size and type deployed by Canada had deployed to an armed conflict since the Second World War.”

Since the Air Wing stood up at Kandahar Airfield 32 months ago on Dec. 6, 2008, RCAF crews have moved a total of 211,396 people and more than 37 million pounds of cargo. All told, Canadian helicopters and planes spent a combined 11 years (!) in the air over Afghanistan.

For those who counting, here's the numbers from the air force:

Air Wing Stats

How can journalists know the truth? A Twitter dialogue

Earlier today, Green Party leader Elizabeth May had these two tweets:

Elizabeth May Tweet

and:

Elizabeth May Tweet

That set off a whole storm of criticism at the Green Party leader who was accused of, among other things, being a Luddite. As May would tweet later in the day, “shocked by some Twitter reaction” and “Twitter sure works to spark debate“. Indeed it does, Ms. May, indeed it does

[Update: May would provide a substantial blog post at the end of the day on this topic. See “The Twitter fire storm and why I said what I said about Wi-Fi“). The National Post's editorialists had at her anyway

My little corner of this debate eventually hinged (as I saw it, anyhow): How do journalists go about finding the 'truth' of the matter? Though I've been a journalist for more than 25 years, I do not claim to know the answer to this question. In fact, if you're in my profession, I think it a good thing to recognize that you do not know the answers to a lot of questions! Still: At some point, you are faced with a constructing some version of reality for your readers and viewers and, in many cases, it will be impossible to construct that story without the assumptions of some truths behind it.

Here's National Post writer Jonathan Kay talking about this in his book Among the Truthers (the book is a look at 9/11 Truthers and other conspiracy theories):

The fact is that there is a grain of truth to the claim that media creates its own “invented reality”… just not in the way that conspiracy theorists believe … rather, the reality we journalists “invent” is very much based on the mundane happenings in the world around us, but it is selected, packaged, and sold according to our own editorial and ideological biases, as well as our commercial understanding of what interests our readers, listeners, and viewers. As a result, the news that appears in the media often is dumbed down, sensationalized, slanted left or right in a way that can make people think we are making it up all out of whole cloth.

… In describing the day's news, for instance, FOX and NPR provide such different points of view that they might as well be broadcasting from different planets. In the current political environment, the usual practice among ordinary media consumers is they “trust” one side and accuse the other of dishonesty .. (p. 94-95)

Kay's book is largely a debunking of the “Truther” movement but what about a journalist on deadline, without the ability to interview scores of sources and read dozens of reports? How are we to know which scientist has it right and which doesn't?

Put yourself, for a minute,  in the shoes of a journalist who has no science background and ask yourself what you make of these three statements

1. Scientists say smoking causes cancer.

2. Scientists say climate change is happening right now; that mankind can do something to slow climate change; and that if we do not do something, bad things will happen.

3. Scientists say long-term exposure to low-power wifi radiation could be harmful to your health.

Now, sixty years ago just like today, a journalist confronted with claim number one would seek out an expert — like a doctor — to set them down the path to knowledge.  Sixty years ago, if you asked a doctor about smoking, you might get something like this:

At some point, of course, the experts figured out that smoking kills and journalists are hard-pressed today to find an expert that will sing the virtues of smoking.

But what about statement two?

Any journalist (like me)  who's ever written about climate change can expect a deluge of e-mail challenging our reporting if their reporting assumes the truth of statement number two. Indeed, we'll get many correspondents who believe that there is a mass media conspiracy to suppress important information that suggests climate change science is a great fraud. For better or worse, I am not one of those journalists. I believe in the truth of statement two (though you will find some journalists ready to challenge that truth) though that leaves lots of room for discussion about the policy implications that stem from accepting statement two. And I should point out that statement two is accepted by all federal political parties, from Conservatives to Greens. There is no one in Parliament to champion a dissenting view of the basics around this fact.

But one of the reasons I have come to believe in statement two is that I have talked to enough scientists but I also rely heavily on “official” pronouncements from the Government of Canada and the like that this the accepted view of most scientists.

Now what about statement three? Personally, I want statement three to be false because I love wi-fi and find it useful. Not only that, I have a wi-fi network at work and at home.  Professionally, though, I ought to challenge my own views on this and approach this issue with a commitment to fairly and accurately reporting the science on this issue. Right?

The issue, so far as I can tell, has not been as exhaustively studied as smoking or climate change. So far, though, there does not appear to be any conclusive evidence of any harm. Indeed, most of the studies I've seen say: There is no harm. And yet, here's a professor at a recognized Canadian university who believes that there is the potential for harm and that we have not studied the issue enough. Meanwhile, the the folks at Princeton University saying, relax, wifi is safe.

So if it was just Trent versus Princeton here, who would you go with? Journalists, I submit, are as influenced by brand and reputation as anyone else. And, though I'm very fond of Trent and mean no disrespect, Princeton wins here on rep.

But — if you know Trent, Trent folks would see this as precisely the reason to be supporting Trent. Princeton stands for big science and big money — and don't you think telecoms pay for all that research? Trent is the indie guy with no axe to grind except looking out for your health!

I'm generalizing here a bit but I hope you get my point: No matter what the subject, journalists have to, as a practical matter, give more weight to one source than another. And if more sources are on one side than the other, we tend to go with that.

But those choices, inevitably, lead to charges of bias and calls for objectivity. This, at the end of it all, was what my Twitter conversation came to be about. I was asked: Why can't you just report the facts? Ok, then. Which ones? All of them? Cuz the minute you choose to omit one fact and keep another in, you have made a value decision and value decisions are not, by definition, objective decisions. Which story would you put on the front page? The one about the death of the gun registry or the death of the long-form census? Both are certainly important, one could argue, but one will sell more papers than the other. Is a news organization biased if it chooses one over the other?

Again: I do not have all the answers to these question but I am convinced of a few things, namely:

1. I will wake up tomorrow ready to prove myself wrong of what I thought to be true today. That's my job.

2. My readers and viewers are smarter than I am.

3. I'm a good enough journalist to be fair and to be accurate but I'm going to need a lot of help, advice, and luck to be “truthful and objective.”

And on that note, I leave you with this, which is funny because it's largely true and explains much about the news business:

 

Good luck Jack Layton and see you in September

My family's thoughts and prayers are with Jack Layton, Olivia Chow and their family today and if Jack says he'll be back in September, I believe him. Good luck, best wishes, and see you in September:

Statement from Jack Layton:

On February 5th, 2010 I shared with Canadians that I, like 25,000 other Canadian men every year, had been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

I have received overwhelming support from my loving family, my friends, my caucus and party, and thousands of everyday Canadians.

Their stories and support have touched me. And I have drawn strength and inspiration from them.

In the closing days of the most recent session of the House of Commons, I suffered from some stiffness and pain.

After the House rose, I undertook a series of tests at Princess Margaret Hospital in Toronto.

My battle against prostate cancer is going very well. My PSA levels remain virtually undetectable.

However, these tests, whose results I received last week, also indicate that I have a new, non-prostate cancer that will require further treatment.

So, on the advice of my doctors, I am going to focus on treatment and recovery.

I will therefore be taking a temporary leave of absence as Leader of the New Democratic Party of Canada. I'm going to fight this cancer now, so I can be back to fight for families when Parliament resumes.

To that end, I have requested that the President of our party, Brian Topp, consult our Parliamentary caucus and then convene a meeting of our party's federal council to appoint an interim leader.

The interim leader will serve until I resume my duties.

I intend to do so when Parliament meets on September 19th.

I am also making a recommendation on who the interim leader should be.

I suggest that Hull-Aylmer MP Nycole Turmel be named interim leader during this period.

Ms. Turmel enjoys unanimous support as the national chair of our Parliamentary caucus. She is an experienced national leader in both official languages. And she will do an excellent job as our national interim leader.

Let me conclude by saying this.

If I have tried to bring anything to federal politics, it is the idea that hope and optimism should be at their heart.

We CAN look after each other better than we do today. We CAN have a fiscally responsible government. We CAN have a strong economy; greater equality; a clean environment.

We CAN be a force for peace in the world.

I am as hopeful and optimistic about all of this as I was the day I began my political work, many years ago.

I am hopeful and optimistic about the personal battle that lies before me in the weeks to come.

And I am very hopeful and optimistic that our party will continue to move forward.

We WILL replace the Conservative government, a few short years from now.

And we WILL work with Canadians to build the country of our hopes

Of our dreams

Of our optimism

Of our determination

Of our values…

Of our love.

Thank you.

Statement from Nycole Turmel:

I think Jack’s statement speaks for itself today.

My colleagues and I are all just wishing our leader a speedy recovery.

As for the next steps, Caucus will meet on Wednesday and Federal Council Thursday to choose an interim leader. I am honoured by his recommendation, but have no further comment to make today.

Thank you.

Talk tough or be nice: Canada's China numbers grow no matter what

When the Conservatives formed a government under Stephen Harper early in 2006, the government's stance towards China was cool, to say the least. Concerned about China's poor record on human rights and democratic reform, the Harper government seemed to go out of its way to thumb its nose at China.  In October, 2007, for example, Harper posed in his office with the Dalai Lama (left, pic taken by PMO), which the government of China called “disgusting conduct.” Harper was one of the few world leaders who did not bother going to Beijing for the opening of the 2008 Olympic Winter Games, even though Canada would follow China as host of those games in Vancouver in 2010.

Then, in 2009, Harper went to China. He was dressed down publicly by China's number two politician, Premier Wen Jiabiao (a rebuke I took offence to as a Canadian). The following year, Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Ottawa ahead of the 2010 G20 Summit in Toronto. Now, John Baird, in his first major trip as foreign affairs minister, is in China.

Some believed that the Conservatives shed their previously hawkish stance on China to better help Canadian firms win new business in China. Really? Let's take a look at the trade data:

Canadian exports to China grew by 8.2%, 21.9% and 10.1% in the first three years of the Harper government, when it was “talking tough” to China. Canadian exports grew 6.5% and 18.7%  in 2009 and 2010 respectively, when the Harper government decided to take a different stance. (Data source: Industry Canada) Now: Could exports between 2005 and 2008 have grown faster if the Harper government had “talked nice” during that period? Maybe. But export growth of 21.9% in the same year that Harper was committing his “disgusting conduct” of meeting with the Dalai Lama seems pretty good to me.

Moreover, Canada's exports to China grew relative to our overall exports. In 2005, our sales to China made up 1.65% of our overall exports. In 2006, 2007, and 2008 — the years when Harper “cooled” relations — Chinese exports accounted for 1.77%, 2.11%, and 2.17% of Canada's overall exports. Decent growth in every year. In 2010, exports to China now account for 3.31 per cent of overall exports, up from just 1.06 per cent a decade ago in 2001.

If I had to take any lesson from these numbers it might be this: Our exports are growing because we have stuff the Chinese want to buy. It doesn't much matter how our government behaves — they're still buying. And if that's the case, why not do more to stand up for human rights and democracy. We'll still get rich selling to the Chinese!

 

 

A "Truthers" debunker resource kit

I most recently ran into some 9/11 truthers — three of them actually — at the NDP convention last month in Vancouver. I was among several hundred convention delegates outside the Vancouver Convention Centre on a beautiful summer's evening enjoying a cocktail and some nibbles at the end of a day filled with policy debates when one of them spotted my “Media” badge and we started chatting about the day's events. I can't recall how the conversation turned but turn it did and these three young men patiently explained to me why the attacks of 9/11 were an inside job and why I was complicit in the media conspiracy to avoid uncovering the truth.

I had certainly not done the homework that my conversants had done and found it difficult to hold up my end of the conversation. This morning, though, I ran across some excellent resources as I began reading Jon Kay's so-far fascinating new book Among the Truthers: A Journey Through America’s Growing Conspiracist Underground which should help me the next time I'm called upon to participate in a discussion about who was behind the 9/11 attacks and why.

Parks Canada to "invade" Canada's biggest cities with rock'n'roll

Betcha didn't know this but: it is Parks Day in Canada on July 16 and Parks Canada — which runs the country's national parks and historic sites — is putting on some free parties in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver. Here's the press release:

Beginning at noon, Parks Canada will invade the heart of Montréal, Toronto and Vancouver to offer Canadian families and young people a program of events including free performances involving some of the most prominent names in the Canadian art scene.

In Montréal, the Lachine Canal National Historic Site will play host to the Québécois group Les Trois Accords, followed by singer Marie-Mai. In Toronto, Centre Island will be resonating to the sound of Toronto rock band Skydiggers, followed by the rhythm of tunes by singer-songwriter-composers Serena Ryder, of Toronto, and Sarah Harmer, of Burlington. Finally, at Stanley Park's Brockton Point in Vancouver, the young singer-songwriter-composer Kate Morgan from Kamloops, the Saskatoon rock band The Sheepdogs, and the Neo-Canadian hip-hop singer K'naan, a native of Somalia, will play back to back.

“Canadians are changing and no longer have the same connection with nature as their parents and grandparents once did,” explained Mr. Alan Latourelle, Chief Executive Officer of Parks Canada. “Parks Canada is adapting by going into the very heart of cities to make Canadians more aware of the beauty of these historic, natural and cultural sites that comprise our collective heritage, and which we are protecting on their behalf.”

Some questions for the (inevitably underpaid and over-stressed) Environment Canada bureaucrat (for Parks Canada is an agency of Environment Canada) who wrote this press release:

  1. “Parks Canada will invade the heart of ..” Invade? Really? Like a noxious weed? That's the verb you wanted to use? Memo: War of 1812 celebrations are next year.
  2. What does it mean to be “Neo-Canadian”?  Couldn't we just call K'Naan “a Canadian”? Or a Somali-Canadian? What's a Neo-Canadian?
  3. Much as I'm happy to see these artists get some great exposure, I'm not sure I connect this “invasion” of three Canadian cities by some cool indie bands to a greater appreciation of Canada's National Parks. Looking forward to hearing more about that! I'm guessing Sarah Harmer — who I associate more with Kingston, ON where she went to university and got her musical start than her hometown of Burlington — may use the stage to talk about the importance of preserving chunks of the Niagara Escarpment and how Parks Canada has only one National Park in this region, the beautiful Bruce Peninsula National Park of Canada. Plea to Sarah: Press the feds to somehow designate the entire Bruce Trail as a national park!)

In the meantime, the Parks Canada press release is as good an excuse as any to play some music video from these bands. So here's one of my fave Canadian acts, The Skydiggers (whose original lineup included one Peter Cash on guitar who happens to be the brother of one Andrew Cash, the newly elected NDP MP for Davenport) with what I think is their biggest hit, “I Will Give You Everything”:

 

The Conservatives turn their guns to the socialist hordes

During the last Parliament, the Conservatives adopted a rather noxious strategy of trying to derail then Opposition Leader Michael Ignatieff in Question Period by putting up one of their MPs to deliver a variety of personal or harsh partisan attacks just before Ignatieff's first question. They did this using what is known on the Hill as an “S.O. 31”, short for Standing Order 31 or “Members Statement”, a 15-minute period just before daily Question Period during which MPs are free to stand up and say just about anything they want on any subject so long as they don't speak for longer than 1 minute. Very often, MPs use an S.O. 31 Members Statement to acknowledge important events or people in their riding; point out anniversaries, celebrations, memorials or simply make a point about policy. They can be quite touching. Conservative MP Harold Albrecht used an S.O. 31 to pay tribute to his wife who collapsed as they were to head out to an election celebration party on May 2 and would die days later. Liberal MP Bob Rae was teary-eyed himself in this tribute to Toronto Star columnist Jim Travers, who passed away earlier this year.

But the Conservatives, alone among the parties in Parliament, often used the 15-minutes of Members Statements to systematically attack their opponents. More specifically, they would use the final Members Statement prior to the beginning of the Question Period — and the first speaker in Question Period is always the Leader of the Official Opposition — to attack the Leader of the Official Opposition and/or the Official Opposition with over-the-top verbiage. And remember: SO 31s are not debates. You cannot respond to one if you or your party is attacked. That's one of the reasons I find this tactic to be particularly un-Parliamentary.

Here's a good example delivered on March 24, the second to last day of the last Parliament by Conservative MP Terence Young; here's a hit by Conservative backbencher Robert Sopuk on March 21; Dean Del Mastro did the honours on March 9; Randy Hoback on March 8;  James Lunney here … I could go on. The themes were monotonously similar: The Liberals lie; they have a secret plan; Ignatieff is just visiting, it's all part of a Liberal culture of deceit. Etc. Etc.

Now, though, with the Liberals largely vanquished, the Tories need new enemies apparently. We, the media, continue to be a chief target. And so now is the “NDP radical left”. So, despite a commitment to a new spirit of civility in the House of Commons,  the Conservatives lined up a backbench hitter to rail away at Jack Layton and the NDP just before Layton's first question in the Question Period. The hit — the first S.O. 31 of its kind in this Parliament I'm aware of — was delivered by Kootenay-Columbia rookie MP David Wilks who, as it turns out, is one of a handful of Conservative MPs that, because the majority Conservative government overflows with members, has had to find a seat next to the NDP. And so as Wilks railed away (See below), we could see the NDP caucus and Layton turn and look at Wilks with a great deal of amusement. Here's the hit as recorded by Hansard:

Mr. David Wilks (Kootenay—Columbia, CPC):  Mr. Speaker, the NDP of the radical hard left do not know the first thing about governing. Ask a British Columbian or Ontarian who had to put up with its members in power. While Canadians remain concerned about jobs and the economy, the NDP is having a gut-wrenching debate about whether or not it should remain committed to its reckless, hard left, high tax, socialist principles. The NDP radical left remains committed to pro-drug policies and anti-trade policies. The NDP opposes Canada's leadership as a clean energy superpower. It even questions its commitment to federalism, with calls to repeal the Clarity Act.  The NDP proposed child care from birth to age 12, a 45-day work year and a 50% hike in the pension plan, policies that would cost billions. The radical hard left NDPers should stop and think about the real priorities of Canadians: jobs and the economy.