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Quigley: Five Reasons Drone Assassinations Are Illegal
Znet Article, May, 16 2012
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The use of drones to assassinate people violates US and international law in multiple ways
Quigley: Thirteen Ways Government Tracks Us
Znet Article, April, 10 2012
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Privacy is eroding fast as technology offers government increasing ways to track and spy on citizens
Quigley: Social Justice Quiz 2012: Thirteen Questions
Znet Article, February, 18 2012
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The US spends $100 billion more on our military than the next highest 15 countries combined
Quigley: Occupying Corporations: How to Cut Corporate Power
Znet Article, February, 07 2012
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Corporations have hijacked most of the rights of people while evading the responsibilities
Quigley: Haiti: Seven Places Where the Earthquake Money Did and Did Not Go
Znet Article, January, 04 2012
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Haitians deserve to know where the money has gone
Quigley: Take Local Police Out of Immigration Enforcement
Znet Article, December, 20 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The United States has failed to recognize the universality of human rights for migrants, rights we are all entitled to just because we are human
Quigley: Challenging the Old Boys Network in the Vatican
Znet Article, October, 25 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Protesting for women priests
Quigley: Victimized a Second Time
Znet Article, October, 19 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
How did the survivors of Haiti’s earthquake go from being the focus of an historic outpouring of solidarity and support in the days and weeks after the earthquake, to being victimized again – this time by human actions?
Quigley: Report from Haiti
Znet Article, October, 09 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Where has the money raised for Haiti gone?
Quigley: Wave of Illegal, Senseless and Violent Evictions Swells in Port au Prince
Znet Article, August, 26 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The administration of President Michel Martelly has apparently given a green light to widespread violent demolition of camps without any legal process
Quigley: Katrina Pain Index 2011: Race, Gender, Poverty
Znet Article, August, 24 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The impact of Katrina and government bungling continue to inflict major pain on the people left behind
Quigley: Displaced Women Demand Justice in Port au Prince
Znet Article, July, 02 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The people calling for justice are residents of a make shift tent camp called Camp Django in the Delmas 17 neighborhood
Quigley: Haiti Facts Seventeen Months after Earthquake
Znet Article, June, 26 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Seventeen months later, Haiti remains deeply wounded
Quigley: Over 2,600 Activists Arrested in US Protests
Znet Article, June, 02 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Arrests at protest have been increasing each year since 2009
Quigley: Honduras Human Rights Abuses Worse One Year After President Lobo Took Office
Znet Article, January, 28 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Unprecedented violence against journalists is not an indicator of democratic governance and reconciliation.
Quigley: One Year After Quake
Znet Article, January, 11 2011
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
One year after the January 12 2010 earthquake, more than a million people remain homeless in Haiti. Homemade shelters and tents are everywhere in Port au Prince.
Quigley: Obama’s Liberty Problem: Why Indefinite Detention by Executive Order Should Scare the Hell Out of People
Znet Article, December, 27 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The right to liberty is one of the foundation rights of a free people. The idea that any US President can bypass Congress and bypass the Courts by issuing an Executive Order setting up a new legal system for indefinite detention of people should ...
Quigley: Attention Left, Liberal and Radical Groups – Pennsylvania Has Been Monitoring You
Znet Article, October, 07 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Just over a month ago, ProPublica broke the story that Pennsylvania’s Office of Homeland Security contracted with the Institute of Terrorism Research and Response (ITRR), a private Israeli-based company, to assess terrorist threats impacting law e...
Quigley: Katrina Pain Index 2010 New Orleans – Five Years Later
Znet Article, August, 07 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
It will be five years since Katrina on August 29. The impact of Katrina is quite painful for regular people in the area. This article looks at what has happened since Katrina not from the perspective of the higher ups looking down from their off...
Quigley: Katrina Pain Index 2010 New Orleans – Five Years Later
Znet Article, August, 07 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
It will be five years since Katrina on August 29. The impact of Katrina is quite painful for regular people in the area. This article looks at what has happened since Katrina not from the perspective of the higher ups looking down from their off...
Quigley: Fourteen Examples of Systemic Racism in the U.S. Criminal Justice System
Znet Article, August, 01 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The biggest crime in the U.S. criminal justice system is that it is a race-based institution where African-Americans are directly targeted and punished in a much more aggressive way than white people.
Quigley: Dissent Victory for Animal Rights Activists
Znet Article, July, 18 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Police reports state that on October 21, 2007 a group of about twenty people trespassed onto the front lawn of the home of a Berkeley professor involved in bio-medical research on animals. According to the US government, some of the protestors had...
Quigley: Double Standard: BP and Bhopal
Znet Article, July, 03 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
When President Barak Obama went after BP and demanded a $20 billion dollar fund be set up for victims of the Gulf oil spill, the people of India were furious. They saw a US double standard. The US demonstrated it values human life within the US ...
Quigley: African American Mississippi Man Starts Record Sixth Murder Trial
Znet Article, June, 11 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
An African American man, Curtis Flowers, made history this week when he became the first person in U.S. history to ever go on trial for murder six times for the same crime. Mr. Flowers has been in jail in Mississippi since 1996, accused of the m...
Quigley: African American Mississippi Man Starts Record Sixth Murder Trial
Znet Article, June, 11 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
An African American man, Curtis Flowers, made history this week when he became the first person in U.S. history to ever go on trial for murder six times for the same crime. Mr. Flowers has been in jail in Mississippi since 1996, accused of the m...
Quigley: Three in a Million - Voices from the Haitian Camps
Znet Article, February, 19 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The United Nations reported there are 1.2 million people living in “spontaneous settlements” or homeless camps around Port au Prince. Three people living in the camps spoke with this author this week, before the hard rains hit.
Quigley: U.S. Brags Haiti Response is a “Model” While More Than a Million Remain Homeless in Haiti
Znet Article, February, 15 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Despite the fact that over a million people remained homeless in Haiti one month after the earthquake, the U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, Ken Merten, is quoted at a State Department briefing on February 12, saying “In terms of humanitarian aid delivery...
Quigley: Hell And Hope In Haiti
Znet Article, January, 29 2010
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Smoke and flames rose from the sidewalk. A white man took pictures. Slowing down, my breath left me. The fire was a corpse. Leg bones sticking out of the flames.
Quigley: When Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib Come Home
Znet Article, October, 27 2009
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
The Louisiana Board that licenses psychologists is facing a growing legal fight over torture and medical care at the infamous Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib prisons.
Quigley: Revolutionary Haitian Priest, Gerard Jean-Juste, Presente!
Znet Article, May, 30 2009
Bill Quigley
Quigley's ZSpace page
Though Haitian priest Father Gerard Jean-Juste died May 27, 2009, at age 62, in Miami from a stroke and breathing problems, he remains present to millions. Justice-loving people world-wide mourn his death and celebrate his life. Pere Jean-Juste ...


