Bart Hawkins Kreps
- Location
- Canada
- Birthday
- November 21
- Bio
- As an American expatriate, I struggled for 30 years with the question of whether to become a citizen of Canada. On the one hand, Canadians still must swear their fealty to a bizarre, outdated, anachronistic medieval figurehead as our "head of state". On the other hand, we Canadians can truthfully state that our monarch no longer claims the right to imprison people indefinitely without trial.
MY RECENT POSTS
- Klondike Solitaire
September 22, 2009 11:52PM - Canada was complicit in
prisoner abuse at Guantanamo:
court
August 14, 2009 03:44PM - Canada Day on the Klondike
June 29, 2009 11:00PM - Abdelrazik, Kafka, and United
Nations Committee 1267
June 08, 2009 02:54PM - Bipartisan lovefest in Toronto
May 28, 2009 05:11PM
MY RECENT COMMENTS
- “An excellent post - you
provide some important context
that I
haven't seen
anywhe…”
1:07PM - “Thanks for this -- an
excellent post.
As
you say, the so-called nuclear
disaster i…”
March 10, 2012 01:51PM - “That is brilliant and
beautiful. Rated. It's also
the first
valentine card I
have…”
February 15, 2012 09:38AM - “Thank you Jeff. I have
watched my own mother struggle
with
Parkinson's, and
learn…”
February 05, 2012 09:03PM - “It's hard to believe
that someone would say in
all
seriousness: "If some
Mar…”
January 16, 2012 02:25PM
Bart Hawkins Kreps's Links
- My website
- An Outside Chance
- Writers I try not to miss
- Dahlia Lithwick on Jurisprudence
- Glenn Greenwald's Unclaimed Territory
Klondike Solitaire

YUKON TERRITORY, CANADA, 1990
Neither a high-stakes wager, nor a midnight ride to the Tombstones, were part of my plans that rainy Friday evening in Dawson City. When I knocked on the door of a cabin I had visited briefly a few weeks before, I sought only a warm/… Read full post »
Canada was complicit in prisoner abuse at Guantanamo: court
A Federal Court of Appeal in Canada ruled today that the Canadian government must seek the return of a Canadian citizen held in Guantanamo, due to Canadian officials' complicity in interrogating the man under duress.
Omar Khadr has been a US captive for a third of his… Read full post »
Canada Day on the Klondike

July 1, 2008 – The sound of soft rain on our tent woke us on the morning of July 1st, and the showers continued long enough to make us consider staying in our comfortable campsite beside the Yukon River. But by mid-afternoon the rain slowed to a drizzle,… Read full post »
Abdelrazik, Kafka, and United Nations Committee 1267
‘War on terror’ hypocrisies cross many borders
In October, 2003, Canadian citizen Maher Arar returned home to Ottawa and told his grim story of extraordinary rendition. Detained by the US at John F. Kennedy Airport as a suspected member of Al Qaeda, he was refused passage b… Read full post »
All right, I’m a slow learner. Until I saw the ad in the newspaper, I really didn’t get it. I didn’t really understand that if the Bush administration torture architects are brought to justice, it won’t be because of the Democratic Party, but in spite of the Democratic Party./… Read full post »
An American Hero in Canada
Last night I had the privilege of meeting an American hero.
His name is Chuck Wiley, and he spoke to a small group of Canadians who believe that George W. Bush should be arrested when he steps onto Canadian soil next Friday.
Bush, along with another well-connected American,/… Read full post »
Obama's selective empathy
Last week’s controversy was about President Obama saying Supreme Court nominees should possess empathy. This week’s controversy is about Obama’s decision to fight to keep additional photographs of torture secret. What’s the connection?
Over the last few months,/… Read full post »
The law must not be enforced - that would be vengeance
Do you and I believe that the UN Convention Against Torture is part of our law, and therefore we must abide by its terms? Ah, we may say so, but David S. Broder knows better. Our "plausible-sounding rationale", he says, "cloaks an unworthy desire for vengeance."
So the Washington Post… Read full post »
Decriminalizing torture
Will Barack Obama decriminalize torture?
President Obama did renounce torture as an interrogation tactic at the beginning of his administration, with an Executive Order that appeared to reaffirm long-standing principles of international law. But since that opening move, the Obama administratio… Read full post »
Salon.com