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» Reason in Amsterdam, 2006 Homepage
Matt Stone & Trey Parker
Matt Stone and Trey Parker are co-creators and executive producers of COMEDY CENTRAL's award-winning animated series "South Park."
Stone and Parker met while attending the University of Colorado in Boulder. While in college, the duo made crudely produced comedic shorts, including the Student Academy Award-winner "American History" and the original "Frosty vs. Santa Claus," the precursor to the now infamous "The Spirit of Christmas."
In 1994, Stone acted in Parker's first feature-length film "Cannibal the Musical," which caught the attention of then FoxLab executive Brian Graden who commissioned the team to create a Christmas Video card to send to his friends. Thus the five-minute short, "The Spirit of Christmas" was born and spawned "South Park," the animated series that follows the adventures of four fourth-graders in the Rocky Mountain fictional town of South Park. Stone also produced and acted in Parker's second live-action feature film "Orgazmo," and both Stone and Parker acted in the Universal film "BASEketball," directed by Davis Zucker. In the summer of 1999, Parker and Stone released their critically acclaimed feature length film, "South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut," which was produced by Paramount Pictures. The film earned an Oscar nomination, as well as a LA Film Critics Award, a NY Film Critics award, and an MTV Movie Award. In 2004, Stone and Parker teamed up to produce “Team America: World Police,” in which marionette superheroes fight to end terrorism and put tired celebrities out of their misery. Stone and Parker also wrote, performed on and executive produced albums including "Chef Aid: The South Park Album," the "South Park: Bigger, Longer and Uncut" soundtrack, "Mr. Hankey's Christmas Classics," and "Timmy and the Lords of the Underworld."
Stone and Parker live in the Los Angeles area.
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Andrew Sullivan
Andrew Sullivan is one of the most popular bloggers and provocative social and political commentators today. An essayist for TIME magazine, a columnist for the Sunday Times of London and senior editor at The New Republic, he also is the editor of andrewsullivan.com, a daily destination for readers seeking informed commentary on international affairs, domestic politics, religion and faith, culture and more.
Andrewsullivan.com is a collection of his columns and articles from major publications, links to noteworthy articles by other writers, and "The Daily Dish" — his incisive and blunt observations about current events and people in the news.
The former editor-in-chief of The New Republic magazine, Sullivan was the youngest editor in its history and was acknowledged for making the magazine more relevant to readers of his generation. He stirred controversy with his widely influential critique of the Clinton health-care plan, the publication of Charles Murray's The Bell Curve, his pioneering coverage of gay rights, the Supreme Court and affirmative action, and his acclaimed reporting and writing on the Bosnian War. He was named Editor of the Year by Adweek and received National Magazine Awards for Reporting, General Excellence and Public Interest.
Sullivan's critically-acclaimed landmark book, Virtually Normal: An Argument About Homosexuality, was the first to argue for civil marriage rights for gay couples. It set the gay rights movement's agenda for the following decade. He also is the author of Same Sex Marriage: Pro and Con and Love Undetectable: Notes on Friendship, Sex and Survival. A practicing Catholic, he has challenged the Church's position on gay life and has written extensively on the crises in the Church.
His articles have appeared in The New Republic, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post and Esquire, with titles ranging from "This Is a Religious War" and "The Real Gay Agenda: Addressing Some Misconceptions" to "Who Says the Church Can't Change?" and, on the controversy at Harvard, "Larry and the Women: In Defense of Summers."
Sullivan's forthcoming book, "The Conservative Soul: How We Lost It; How To Get It Back," will be published by Harper Collins in the fall of 2006.
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Ronald Bailey
Ronald Bailey is the award-winning science correspondent for Reason magazine. He is the author of the new book Liberation Biology: The Moral and Scientific Case for the Biotech Revolution (Prometheus), and his work appears in The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2004.
Prior to joining Reason in 1997, Bailey produced several weekly national public television series including Think Tank and TechnoPolitics, as well as several documentaries for PBS television and ABC News. In 1993, he was the Warren T. Brookes Fellow in Environmental Journalism at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. From 1987-1990, Bailey was a staff writer for Forbes, covering economic, scientific and business topics. His articles and reviews have appeared in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Commentary, The Public Interest, Smithsonian, TechCentralStation, National Review, Readers Digest, and many other publications. Bailey won a 2004 Southern California Journalism Award for best magazine feature for his story, "The Battle For Your Brain," which delved into the ethical and political conflicts over new brain enhancement technologies.
Bailey is the editor of Global Warming and Other Eco-Myths: How the Environmental Movement Uses False Science to Scare Us to Death (Prima Publishing, 2002), Earth Report 2000: Revisiting The True State of The Planet (McGraw Hill, 1999), and The True State of the Planet (The Free Press, 1995). He is the author of ECOSCAM: The False Prophets of Ecological Apocalypse (St. Martins Press, 1993).
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Boudewijn Bouckaert
Dr. Boudewijn Bouckaert is a professor at the law school of the University of Ghent and an associate professor at the University of Paris IX and Aix-Marseille. He is director of the Department of Legal Theory & History. He has been lecturer at the Institute for Humane Studies, Fairfax, Virginia, USA, and also at the Institute for Economic Studies Europe, Paris, France. His main fields of interest are the economic analysis and the history of property institutions, the general theory of sources of law, zoning law. He is a member of the High Council for Judicial Matters and Chairman of the Land Management Committee.
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Helle Merete Brix
Helle Merete Brix is a journalist, author, lecturer and editor of sappho.dk, Denmark's newest web magazine on free speech, Islamism and anti-Semitism. For a number of years she has been one of Denmark's most well known writers and commentators on these subjects.
She got her education as a journalist from The Danish School of Journalism and is a frequent contributor to Danish newspapers and magazines. She is also a regular contributor to the web magazine of the Norwegian human rights organization Human Rights Service and writes for the French internet journal proche-orient.info.
Her latest book Fri tale (Free Speech) on Danish artists and free speech was co-edited with the President of the Organization of Danish Fiction Writers Peter Legaard Nielsen and the noted actor and commentator Farshad Kholghi.
In 2003 she published I krigens hus: Islams kolonisering af Vesten (In the House of War: Islam's Colonization of the West), The book created a storm and led to the establishment The Free Press Society of whose steering board she is a member.
In 2002 she edited Islam i Vesten: Pĺ Koranens vej? (Islam in the West: On the Path of the Koran.) In the same year the Copenhagen theater Folketeatret produced her monologue De frafaldne (he Apostates) on totalitarian ideologies in the 20th century. She has also published an autobiography I begyndelsen (In the Beginning).
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Jerry Cameron
Jerry Cameron spent a considerable part of his seventeen-year law enforcement career in the "war on drugs." Not only was he Chief of two small town departments for a total of eleven years, he is also a graduate of the 150th Session of the FBI National Academy, the DEA Basic Drug Enforcement Course, and two DEA Advanced Drug Enforcement Professional Institutes. Cameron participated as a front line warrior in street enforcement and consequently was recognized nationally for developing a street-enforcement-technique known as "Operation Pressure Point." He has been published in The Police Chief, The Florida Police Chief, and Law & Order magazines. He was a full time faculty member of the Institute of Police Technology and Management at the University of North Florida where he taught drug interdiction, roadside interrogation techniques, police ethics, and management.
Toward the end of his career Cameron began to question the efficacy as well as the morality of the "war on drugs." When he began doing serious research on this subject, he concluded that the "war on drugs" was a not only a total failure but that it had caused tremendous damage to society. The simple truth was that not one benefit could be identified and a myriad of unintended destructive consequences were evident. In fact, the war proved counterproductive to every one of its stated goals.
Cameron has seen first hand the devastation of neighborhoods, perversion of the law enforcement mission, and the squandering of resources that are the result of prohibition. Today he speaks out against decades of failed policy and encourages the "re-legalization" of drugs. He believes that this is the only way to decrease the amount of drugs falling into the hands of our children, to make room for violent offenders to serve their full terms in our prisons, and to return law enforcement to its legitimate function of protecting our citizens. Cameron provides audiences with a look at the failed "war on drugs" through the eyes of a front line veteran.
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Peter D. A. Cohen, Ph.D.
Recently retired, Peter Cohen researched drug use, drug policy and drug use epidemiology at the Universiteit van Amsterdam as director of the first Amsterdam Drug Research Program and, from 1996-2004, as director of CEDRO, the Centre for Drug Research.
Dr Peter Cohen first entered the field of drug research in 1980 by way of a course in sociology on the 'history of social problems'. In his view, human construction of cultures and societies can be partly understood by studying what a society defines as a problem and why. Since then he has studied the so called drug problem as one of the many 'social constructions' of western culture, based on complex prejudice and ideology. His main interest is to conduct empirical research on typical drug myths such as those relating to addiction to cocaine or to cannabis as a stepping stone to more 'dangerous' drugs. Large-scale epidemiological drug use research in the city of Amsterdam and later in the Netherlands as a whole have been conducted. Until 2004, Cohen was the Director of the Centre for Drug Research at the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Universiteit van Amsterdam, doing research funded mostly by the Dutch Ministry of Health.
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Veronique de Rugy
Veronique de Rugy is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. She was a fiscal policy analyst at the Cato Institute from 2001 to 2004, a postdoctoral fellow at the George Mason University Department of Economics from 2000 to 2001, and a research fellow with the Atlas Economic Research Foundation from 1999 to 2000. She has also served on the board of directors of the Center for Freedom and Prosperity since 2000. While her primary research focus is on U.S. fiscal policy, Ms. de Rugy has also written extensively on issues of international scope, including the dangers of European Union and Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development tax harmonization proposals. Her writings have appeared in numerous popular and academic outlets, including Wall Street Journal, Forbes, and the Washington Times. She has provided testimony to the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives on topics that include the effectiveness of the Small Administration, Homeland Security funding, and natural gas pipeline taxation. She is the coauthor of Action ou Taxation, published in Switzerland in 1996.
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Nick Gillespie
Nick Gillespie is editor-in-chief of Reason, a libertarian monthly named one of "The 50 Best Magazines" for two straight years by The Chicago Tribune and a four-time finalist for National Magazine Awards.
Asks The Washington Post: "Which monthly magazine editor argues that the spread of pornography is a victory for free expression? And that drugs from marijuana to heroin should not only be legalized, but using them occasionally is just fine? And is also quite comfortable with gay marriage? The answer is Nick Gillespie, libertarian and doctor of literature, who...is injecting [Reason magazine] with a pop-culture sensibility."
Gillespie originally joined Reason's staff in 1993 as an assistant editor and ascended to the top slot in 2000. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, Slate, Salon, and many other publications. He was a regular contributor to the late, lamented satire site, Suck, where he wrote under the name Mr. Mxyzptlk.
He is a frequent commentator on radio and television programs such as National Public Radio's All Things Considered, CNN's American Morning, Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor, and C-SPAN's Washington Journal. He has also worked as a reporter for several New Jersey newspapers and as an editor at several Manhattan-based music, movie, and teen magazines. He is almost certainly the only journalist to have interviewed both Ozzy Osbourne and the 2002 Nobel laureate in economics, Vernon Smith.
In 1996, Gillespie received his Ph.D. in English literature from the State University of New York at Buffalo. He also holds an M.A. in English with a concentration in creative writing from Temple University and a B.A. in English and Psychology from Rutgers University. Gillespie lives in Washington, D.C.
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Barbara Kolm-Lamprechter
Barbara Kolm-Lamprechter is Secretary General of the Friedrich August v. Hayek Institute in Vienna, Austria. Prior to that she worked as a business consultant and assistant professor at the Department of Tourism and Service Economics at the University of Innsbruck. She is a member of the Board of Business Consultants of the Austrian Chamber of Commerce, responsible for new market approaches and questions of training and a Member of the Mont Pélerin Society and President of the European Center for Economic Growth.
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Mart Laar
Mart Laar is the former prime minister of Estonia. He is credited with helping Estonia in its rapid economic advance. Laar served two terms as prime minister of Estonia, from 1992 to 1994 and again from 1999 to 2002. He received his education at the University of Tartu, where he completed a B.A. in history in 1983 and later an M.A. in philosophy. Between 1990 and 1992 he was a member of the Estonian Congress and Estonian Committee. During the same period he was also a member of the Supreme Council. In 1992 Laar served as a member of the Constitutional Assembly, and from 1992 to 1994 was the prime minister of Estonia. From 1992 to 1995 Laar also served as chairman of the National Coalition Fatherland Party as well as an MP (Riigikogu) VIII session. Laar has held the position of chairman of the Pro Patria party since 1998.
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Julian Morris
Julian Morris is Director of International Policy Network (London), a Research Fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs (London), and a Visiting Professor at the University of Buckingham. He has a Master’s degree in Economics from Cambridge University, and a Graduate Diploma in Law from the University of Westminster.
Mr. Morris is also the author or editor of many papers and books, including Sustainable Development: Promoting Progress or Perpetuating Poverty? (Profile Books, 2002), and Ideal Matter: Intellectual Property and the Globalisation Debate (Centre for New Europe, 2002). He is a frequent commentator in radio, TV and print media.
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Wolfgang Müller
Former Project Director for the Friedrich-Naumann-Foundation. He served as Zimbabwean Country Director and Project Director Economic Affairs South Africa. He worked closely with business associations, human rights organisations, political parties, groups for the unemployed and free market groups such as the Free Market Foundation and the Helen Suzman Foundation. He undertook an empirical research project on the economic reforms in India. He graduated from the University of Konstanz, Germany.
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Johan Norberg
Johan Norberg is the author of several books on subjects such as human rights, entrepreneurship and the history of liberalism, and his globalisation manifesto In Defence of Global Capitalism has recieved the gold medal from the German Hayek Foundation and the Anthony Fisher Memorial Award from the Atlas Foundation. It has been translated in 24 countries.
Norberg is a Senior Fellow at the Centre for the New Europe and has an M.A. in the history of ideas from the University of Stockholm. He has one of Sweden's most widely read blogs, www.johannorberg.net, which has been voted the country's best by the readers of the magazine Internet World.
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David Nott
David Nott is president of Reason Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing free minds and free markets. Under Nott's leadership, Reason's public policy experts have advised President George W. Bush, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, and numerous other officials on how to shrink the burden of government. Reason, a monthly magazine of political and cultural commentary, was named one of the "50 Best Magazines" two straight years by The Chicago Tribune and is described as "a kick-ass, no-holds-barred political magazine" by the New York Post.
Nott's professional experience includes six years as president of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, where he is credited with developing and implementing a business plan that led to a 250 percent increase in revenue. Nott also spearheaded the construction of Mercatus' new Capitol Hill Campus.
Nott is a certified petroleum engineer. From 1986 to 1994, he was a senior reserve engineer at Shell California Production, Inc., coordinating the divisional capital budget, forecasting production and expenses, calculating reserves, and analyzing the profitability of projects and properties.
Nott has written on privatization for the Institute of Economic Affairs, lectured to federal judges on the need for drug policy reform, and written commentary for the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Register, San Diego Union-Tribune, Los Angeles Daily News, and many other publications.
Nott earned a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences, with Distinction, in Economics and Petroleum Engineering from Stanford University.
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Ján Oravec
Mr. Ján Oravec graduated in 1987 from Commenius University in Bratislava (Philosophy – Political Economy), The Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Australia in 1994 (Business Administration) and Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas, USA in 1993-1995 (Bank Management). In 1996 he received his PhD. degree in economics at the Institute of Slovak and World Economy in Bratislava.
He started his professional career at the Institute of Economics of the Slovak Academy of Sciences in 1987. In the beginning of 90-ies he was active in financial sector (financial manager in investment fund, Director of the Investment Banking Dept. in Devin Bank, internships in Banc One, Dallas, Texas, USA and Westpac Bank, Sydney, Australia).
In 1999-2002 Mr. Oravec was working as a Chief of Strategy at the Ministry of Economy of the Slovak Republic. During that period he served as a chairman and member of various Supervisory Boards (SSE, a.s., - one three regional electricity distribution companies, The Slovak Guarantee and Development Bank, Transpetrol, a.s., Slovak Consolidation Agency, Slovak Post-Privatisation Fund), a chairman of a Board of Directors (National Agency for SMEs) and a vice-Chairman of the Government Council for Science and Technology.
In October 2003 he was elected as a President of The Entrepreneurs Association of Slovakia, the first organisation of private entrepreneurs in Slovakia after a collapse of communism. He is a member of a Presidium of The National Union of Employers,the most representative organisation of employers in Slovakia. He represents Slovak employers in the European Economic and Social Committee in Brussels, and in the Slovak Council of Economic and Social Agreement in Bratislava. He is also the member of the Economic Council of the Slovak Government, and member of the Collegium of the Finance minister.
Since 2004 he is a member of a Scientific Board of a Faculty of Economics and Public Administration, The University of Economics in Prague, and a member of an Industrial Board of The Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava. He is a founding father of The F. A. Hayek Foundation Bratislava (established in 1991), and The Slovak Taxpayers Association (1997), since 2004 he is also a member of an Academic Board of a Liberal Institute in Prague.
He is an economic advisor, he writes articles, gives lectures, TV interviews, and public speeches on various topics.
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Tom G. Palmer
Tom G. Palmer is Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and director of Cato University, the Institute's educational arm. He was very active in the late 1980s and the early 1990s in the propagation of classical liberal ideas in the Soviet bloc states and their successors and continues to be active throughout the region through his work with www.cato.ru, the Cato Institute's Russian-language website. He is currently working to achieve similar successes in the Middle East, as director of the Jack Byrne Project on Middle East Liberty, which sponsors an Arabic-language libertarian website, the Lamp of Liberty, and is publishing material in Arabic, Kurdish, and Farsi.
Before joining Cato he was an H. B. Earhart Fellow at Hertford College, Oxford University, and a vice president of the Institute for Humane Studies at George Mason University. He regularly lectures in America, Europe, Eurasia, and the Middle East on political science, public choice, civil society, and the moral, legal, and historical foundations of individual rights. He has published reviews and articles on politics and morality in scholarly journals such as the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Ethics, Critical Review, and Constitutional Political Economy, as well as in publications such as Slate, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the Washington Post, and The Spectator of London. He received his B.A. in liberal arts from St. Johns College in Annapolis, Maryland, his M.A. in philosophy from The Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., and his Ph.D. in politics from Oxford University.
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Natasha Srdoc-Samy
Natasha Srdoc-Samy is the co-founder and President of the Adriatic Institute for Public Policy, Croatia's first independent free market think tank advancing economic freedom and advocating free market reforms in Croatia and Southeast Europe.
Srdoc-Samy's early business experience includes Deutsche Bank AG in Koln, Germany, Consultant to establishing the first investment fund in Slovenia, General Manager at Texpartner, Croatia outsourcing partner to United Colors of Benetton. Srdoc-Samy gained her international banking experience as Accounts Manager for International and Major Businesses at Corporate Credit Department for HVB Bank Group, Zagreb, Croatia.
Since 2003, Srdoc-Samy led the efforts to launch Croatia's first independent free market think and advance free market initiatives in Croatia and Southeast Europe. A group of advisors and leaders were recruited to launching the Adriatic Institute from the Institute of Economic Affairs (UK), The Heritage Foundation (US), Hoover Institution (US), Cato Institute (US), International Policy Network (UK), Stockholm Network (UK), Reason Foundation (US) and Pacific Research Institute (US).
In November 2005, Srdoc-Samy co-authored Croatia's first tax reform book – The Flat Tax – The Case for Tax Reform in Croatia (Croatian language version) with distinguished contributors including Dr. Alvin Rabushka, The Hoover Institution, Ivan Miklos, Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister of Slovakia, Dr. Daniel Mitchell, The Heritage Foundation and John Willman, The Financial Times. The Flat Tax book featured Croatia's first flat tax simulation that when implemented the 15% low-flat tax rate, simplified and non-distortive tax system on personal and corporate income, Croatia's treasury will receive a surplus of 66 Million Kunas after one year's implementation and that tax reform will increase foreign direct investments and boost economic growth.
Srdoc-Samy has been writing, speaking and presenting the need for a strengthened rule of law, an independent judiciary, a concerted effort to combat widespread corruption in Croatia that are foundational blocks to advancing economic reforms. Srdoc-Samy has also spoken to audiences in Europe and USA giving media interviews to advance economic freedom in the Southeast Europe.
Srdoc-Samy was invited by Grover Norquist, President of American for Tax Reform in Washington, DC to participate at the Tax Day news conference (May 17, 2006) at the National Press Club. C-SPAN and major media covered the event as Srdoc-Samy provided an update on the tax revolution sweeping Eastern Europe.
Srdoc-Samy graduated from the University of Rijeka, Croatia with an Economics Degree and received her Masters of Business Administration with distinctive honor from The McCallum Graduate School of Business, Bentley College in Waltham, Massachusetts.
Natasha Srdoc-Samy is also the co-founder of the annualized International Leaders Summit on Economic Growth and Strategic ILS - Economic Roundtables such as the recent event in May 2006 that took place in Ljubljana, Slovenia with Prime Minister Janez Jansa and Finance Minister Dr. Andrej Bajuk of Slovenia.
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Carlo Stagnaro
Carlo Stagnaro is Free Market Environmentalism Director of Istituto Bruno Leoni, Italy's free market think tank, and a fellow of the Brussels-based think tank International Council for Capital Formation. He has written extensively on energy & environmental issues, both in the Italian and the international press. His articles have been published in Il Foglio, Il Riformista, Libero, Oil & Gas Journal, National Post, TechCentralStation, and others. His last book is Piů energia per tutti (More Energy for All, 2005), edited together with Dr. Margo M. Thorning. He is currently working on a book on the Kyoto Protocol and the Lisbon Strategy in the European Union, together with the Dutch economist Dr. Hans J. Labohm.
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Jacob Sullum
Jacob Sullum is a senior editor of Reason, a libertarian monthly named one of "The 50 Best Magazines" for two straight years by The Chicago Tribune and a four-time finalist for National Magazine Awards.
Sullum is the author of Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use (Tarcher/Penguin) and For Your Own Good: The Anti-Smoking Crusade and the Tyranny of Public Health (Free Press).
Sullum's weekly column, distributed by Creators Syndicate, is carried by newspapers across the U.S., including the New York Post, The Washington Times, and the Las Vegas Review-Journal. His work also has appeared in Cigar Aficionado, National Review, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and many other publications.
Saying Yes has been praised in both National Review, which called it "a highly effective debunking," and Mother Jones, which described it as "a healthy dose of sober talk in a debate dominated by yelping dopes." For Your Own Good also was widely praised by reviewers, who called it "compelling" (The Wall Street Journal), "meticulously logical" (The New York Times), and a "cogent and thorough...must-read" (The Washington Post).
Sullum is a frequent guest on TV and radio programs, including The O'Reilly Factor, American Morning, and NPR. A fellow of the Knight Center for Specialized Journalism, he has been a featured speaker at the International Conference on Drug Policy Reform and the Conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy.
In 1988 Sullum won the Keystone Press Award for investigative reporting, and in 1991 he received First Prize in the Felix Morley Memorial Journalism Competition. In 1998 his Reason cover story about pain treatment was a National Magazine Award finalist in the Public Interest category. In 2004 he received the Thomas S. Szasz Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Cause of Civil Liberties.
Sullum first joined Reason in 1989 as an assistant editor, later serving as associate editor and managing editor. He has also worked as the articles editor of National Review and as a reporter for the News and Courier/Evening Post in Charleston, South Carolina, and The Times Leader in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.
Sullum is a graduate of Cornell University, where he majored in economics and psychology. He lives in Northern Virginia with his wife and two daughters.
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Kyle Wingfield
Mr. Wingfield is an editorial page writer for The Wall Street Journal Europe. Before joining the Journal in October 2004, he spent three years with the Associated Press in Atlanta and Montgomery, Alabama, covering ousted Chief Justice Roy Moore and his Ten Commandments monument, civil and criminal court cases, and higher education. A native of Dalton, Georgia, he holds an ABJ in publication management from the University of Georgia.
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