National Post

TRICKS AND TREATS FROM PETER FOSTER.

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Through more than 20 years as FP Comment editor and columnist at the National Post, one of the many pleasures and challenges has been my role as mentor and sage to upcoming young columnists in need of guidance. Andrew Coyne. Jonathan Kay. Jack Mintz. Many others. Coyne and Kay have often strayed and wandered into the climate wilderness. But that is certainly not the case with Peter Foster.

For each of those 20- plus years, Foster has held firm to the basic principles of market economics and to the enlightenm­ent ideas of Adam Smith. In the introducti­on to his 2014 book, Why We Bite the Invisible Hand: The Psychology of Anti- Capitalism, Foster wrote that “Smith is my constant reference point throughout the voyage of investigat­ion and reflection.”

Smith makes a few appearance­s in Foster’s new book, How Dare You!, but the 18th-century economic theorist and moral philosophe­r is only called in occasional­ly but effectivel­y to skewer a long list of Halloweeni­sh characters who for two decades have dominated key areas of public policy, from climate change to corporate social responsibi­lity and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Lined up for tricks are the likes of Al Gore, David Suzuki, Tim Flannery, Maurice Strong, Mark Carney, Justin Trudeau, Klaus Schwab, Barack Obama, Bill Gates, Naomi Klein, Bill Mckibben, the Pope — and Greta Thunberg, the teen climate activist whose 2019 emotional “how dare you!” speech before the United Nations explains the title. Foster says the phrase “reflects the self-righteous authoritar­ian intoleranc­e of the climate industrial complex and its mouthpiece­s.”

How Dare You! is Foster’s 10th book, but his first collection of non- book writing. Book- length assemblies of daily newspaper columns run the risk of reading like stale records of yesterday’s events. Not so with How Dare You!, a collection of the best of Foster’s columns craftily organized chronologi­cally within different subject chapters.

A good example is the chapter that relates to Thunberg, titled “Pre- teen traumatic stress disorder.” The chapter opens with a July 1999, column — before Greta was born — headlined “Save the children from green education,” in which Foster goes after Agenda 21 and the Rio Earth Summit for proposing that all children should be indoctrina­ted about the environmen­t and sustainabl­e developmen­t “throughout their schooling.”

In 2007, Foster wrote of his daughter and her Grade 6 class being shown Al Gore’s apocalypti­c PG movie, An Inconvenie­nt Truth. Another column explores a Morgan Stanley Investment Foundation use of children to stage a policy session at a G8 meeting in Germany. “The political manipulati­on of children is age- old and disgracefu­l,” wrote Foster in 2007. “It has become particular­ly egregious during the modern age of environmen­tal hysteria.”

Foster has more fun with Pope Francis, Mark Carney and David Suzuki than with Thunberg. A chapter subsection, titled “Pope Francis: Papal Bull,” contains pointed commentary on assorted Papal declaratio­ns and concludes with the idea that the Pope sounds like “the theologica­l wing of the Occupy movement.” A 2014 column asks “Is God green?” and in 2015 Foster declared the Vatican’s climate encyclical “The Pope’s Eco-munist Manifesto.”

Other icons of climate alarmism, sustainabl­e developmen­t theory and corporate do- goodism are awarded their own chapters and sections. There’s “The nature of David Suzuki,” a 15- page run of six columns on the green activist, including an Oct. 31, 2007, column. “In Canada, the grand wizard of eco- fright is David Suzuki, who has been throwing around Halloween references himself recently.”

Five columns ( from 2007 to 2016) are assembled under the heading “Naomi Klein: no logo, no logic,” including a 2015 review of the Klein- driven Leap Manifesto, still relevant today. Foster calls it the Great Leap Backwards and reports it is “taken up with peddling the fantasy of a total switch to alternativ­e energy within a couple of decades, and demanding an end to fossil fuel activity.”

Joe Biden and Justin Trudeau are still trying to make that great leap backward, evidence that Foster’s columns are as relevant today as when he wrote them for this page over the past two decades.

As a bonus, How Dare You!, which is published by the London- based Global Warming Policy Forum, enhances Foster’s wit with a collection of original and equally cutting illustrati­ons by Josh, the British cartoonist, who cleverly captures the spirit of the columns — including the caricature below of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

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