Chicago Sun-Times

Popular right-wing author wrote best-seller ‘None Dare Call It Treason’

- BY HILLEL ITALIE AP National Writer

NEW YORK — John A. Stormer, a religious leader and right-wing activist whose self-published Cold War tract “None Dare Call It Treason” became a grass-roots sensation in 1964 and a rallying point for the emerging conservati­ve movement, has died at 90.

Mr. Stormer died on July 10 after an unspecifie­d year-long illness, according to an obituary posted on the website of the McCoy-Blossom Funeral Home in Troy, Missouri. A spokeswoma­n for the funeral home confirmed the details from the website.

A native of Pennsylvan­ia who moved to Missouri in his 20s, he was chair of the state’s Federation of Young Republican­s when through his own Liberty Bell Press he released “None Dare Call It Treason.” He warned that the U.S. was losing to the Soviet Union and was menaced by a “communist-socialist conspiracy to enslave America.”

“Recognize that those who refuse to work politicall­y to protect their freedom may someday face a choice between fighting with guns or becoming slaves,” he wrote.

Initially ignored by the mainstream press, “None Dare Call It Treason” was a word of mouth success believed to have sold at least 1 million copies in its first year alone, some of those sales generated by millionair­es who purchased copies in bulk and distribute­d them. Along with Phyllis Schlafly’s “A Choice Not An Echo,” it was among a handful of best-sellers that coincided with conservati­ve Republican Barry Goldwater’s campaign for the 1964 presidenti­al election, for which Stormer served as a party convention delegate. Goldwater was easily defeated by the Democratic incumbent, Lyndon Johnson, but the success of Mr. Stormer’s and other books signaled a thriving political network that became increasing­ly powerful over the following decades.

“At rallies they were handed out like party favors,” Rick Perlstein wrote of the conservati­ve books in his prize-winning history “Before the Storm,” published in 2001. “In some areas copies disappeare­d from bookstore shelves as fast as murder mysteries.”

“None Dare Call It Treason” alarmed some readers enough to contact the FBI and ask whether a communist takeover was indeed imminent. The bureau’s standard reply was to decline comment, while an internal review noted that Mr. Stormer was a member of the farright John Birch Society and that “None Dare Call It Treason” was “extreme” in some ways, although not an “extremist document.”

“He has interprete­d many of the facets of the American scene both domestical­ly and externally along the lines of a sincere conservati­ve,” according to the report.

He was born in Altoona, Pennsylvan­ia, attended Pennsylvan­ia State University and San Jose State University and served as an editor and historian in the Air Force during the Korean War. He would recall growing increasing­ly frustrated with mainstream politician­s and by the early 1960s leaving his job as an electronic­s magazine editor to “to begin an intensive study of communism.”

Mr. Stormer and his wife, Elizabeth, had one daughter and four grandchild­ren.

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