Vin Suprynowicz

Vin Suprynowicz (born c. 1950) is an American libertarian author who formerly edited editorial pages for the Las Vegas, Nevada-based Las Vegas Review-Journal. He has published two volumes of nonfiction essays on the philosophy of law and society, Send In the Waco Killers (1999) and The Ballad of Carl Drega (2002). In 2005, he published his debut novel, The Black Arrow.[1][2]

Biography

Vin Suprynowicz was born in Connecticut. He attended local schools, graduating from E. O. Smith High School in 1968. He graduated from Wesleyan University (Middletown, Connecticut) in 1972 with a degree in art and a concentration in filmmaking.

He started his journalism career writing on a part-time basis for the Hartford Advocate, before becoming (in succession) a reporter for the Willimantic Chronicle, a news editor of the Norwich Bulletin, and the managing editor of the daily Northern Virginia Sun. He also published the Providence Eagle from 1980 to 1985.

At that time Suprynowicz moved to Arizona where he was editor-in-chief of the West Valley View, a newspaper serving the western Phoenix metropolitan area. In 1992 Suprynowicz was offered a position with the Las Vegas Review-Journal and moved to Nevada.

He became involved with the Libertarian Party. In 2000 he ran in Arizona as the vice-presidential candidate of the Libertarian Party with L. Neil Smith as the presidential candidate. Art Olivier and Harry Browne were the Libertarian Party candidates in the other 49 states.

Suprynowicz is also a member and supporter of the Free State Project.He is a regular contributor to Shotgun News magazine.

gollark: Technically, a script with a java code wouldn't be, as "script" is not in fact a programming language.
gollark: FSharp is too long, Haskell won't fit, Rust will, and I've exhausted the list of languages I like.
gollark: `Python` is unfortunately too long to be a possible code.
gollark: "Scripting" is a weird term, incidentally.
gollark: While I'm a bit offended, I kind of have to agree.

References

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