Martin Jezer

Marty Jezer (Nov. 21, 1940 - June 11, 2005), was a well-known activist and author. Born Martin Jezer and raised in the Bronx, he earned a history degree from Lafayette College. He was a co-founding member of the Working Group on Electoral Democracy, and co-authored influential model legislation on campaign finance reform that has so far been adopted by Maine and Arizona. He was involved in state and local politics, as a campaign worker for Bernie Sanders, Vermont's Independent Congressional Representative, and as a columnist and Town Representative.

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Writer and activist

Jezer had been an influential figure in progressive politics from the 1960s to the time of his death. He was editor of WIN magazine (Workshop In Nonviolence), from 1962-8, was a writer for Liberation News Service (LNS), and was active in the nuclear freeze movement, and the organic farming movement (he helped found the Natural Organic Farmers' Association). In 1968, he signed the “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest” pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against the Vietnam War.[1] More recently he was active in progressive causes in Vermont, including the universal health care movement. In 1968 Jezer co-founded, with Verandah Porche, Richard Wizansky, and Ray Mungo, “Total Loss (Packer Corners) Farm” in Guilford, Vermont. After moving to Guilford, he continued writing for WIN magazine, as well as Green Mountain Post, and the NOFA newsletter. His main political outlet from 1998 to 2005 was as a writer of a weekly column for the Brattleboro Reformer that often appeared on the web sites Common Dreams and TomPaine.com; his columns were frequently reprinted in the periodical The Progressive Populist.

Jezer was a lifetime stutterer and wrote a memoir about his condition.[2] He was an important figure in the self-help community for people who stutter, and received the "Member of the Year" award from the National Stuttering Association in 2001. He was also an active member of Speak Easy, based in New Jersey.[3]

References

  1. ^ “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest” January 30, 1968 New York Post
  2. ^ Hugh Kenner, "Life Bottled Up", The New York Times, August 17, 1997.
  3. ^ A. Distler, Battleboro Reformer, June 2005.

Books by Marty Jezer

External links