Oily Rag column - week beginning 31 October 2011
Oily Rag column - week beginning 31 October
2011
Oily Rag
Party Manifesto
By Frank and Muriel
Newman
Hoardings are sprouting like spring mushrooms and
political promises are filling our airwaves - it must be
election time! Not to be denied a soapbox, the Oily Rag
community has been out on the hustings, door knocking,
meeting and greeting, smiling much while saying little, and
generally getting out there encouraging people to support
the Oily Rag cause.
Our workers have even gone as far as publishing the “Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag Party Manifesto – a complete and unique guide to the virtues of living the Oily Rag lifestyle in three simple easily understood steps”.
But before looking at some extracts
from that policy document, here’s a statement from our
leader. “An Oily Rag lifestyle is what it means to be New
Zealander. It’s about being a proud and happy Kiwi looking
ahead to a secure and prosperous future for your children
and their children. It’s about having a house to call home
where you are the master of your money not a slave to it.
That’s our hope, that’s our vision for all New
Zealanders. And that’s why you should cast a vote for the
Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag
Party.”
Workplace
policy
• Stretch from New Plymouth
says, “Always take a cut lunch to work – it’s
guaranteed to save you heaps.”
GST on fruit
and vegetables
• The Oily Rag
Party believes families should not pay GST on their
vegetables - in fact they shouldn’t pay for veggies at
all, they should grow them!
• Dorothy from
Whangarei says, “Why complain about the high price of
parsnips, carrots, leeks and silver beet in the supermarket
when growing even a few winter vegetables is so easy and
much cheaper. One packet of seed or one punnet of seedlings
plus the fertiliser is less than the cost of one kilo of
vegetables on sale. Winter vegetables require fewer sprays
and bug killers than summer
ones.”
Recycling
•
We have a waste not want policy, even when it comes to old
basketballs. Dianne, an oily rag club member says, “Simply
cut the tops of and poke a few holes in the base of the
ball. Fill with sphagnum moss and soil, and fill with
plants, Poke four holes evenly around the top and hang up
with rope or what you have lying around. Makes a good
hanging basket.”
• Glen from Wellington has
a policy straight from the gutter. “Board up the ends of
an old piece of guttering. Half fill it with sphagnum moss
and then soil on top. Plant out with parsley which will
grow nicely even over winter. Probably can do little
lettuces too.”
Transport
policy
• Reduce your speed and
save money. Slowing down from 110 km to 100 km will result
in a 15 percent fuel saving, and you will avoid speeding
tickets! Maniac type driving not only costs money it
aggravates everyone, endangers yourself, your passengers and
the public.
• Make sure tyre pressures are
right. According to Beaurepairs, every 10 percent under the
vehicle manufacturer’s recommended tyre pressure costs
about 2.5 percent in extra fuel
consumption.
The economy
•
“Use half as much, and get the product at half price!”
– an old Oily Rag saying (which we just made up now! -
oily rag ed).
• Any debt is a bad debt. It
takes five minutes to get into debt, and a lifetime to get
out if it.
• Cheap is good but free is
better.
KiwiSaver
•
Every kiwi should save - and could if they lived off the
smell of an oily rag. As Samuel Johnson is said to have
said, "Without frugality none can be rich, and with it
very few would be poor."
The retirement
age
• Any age is a good age to
retire, and many would do so sooner if they lived off the
smell of an oily rag.
And now a concluding remark from
our Leader: “Remember, your future is you. Be a proud Oily
Rag Kiwi - vote for a better future by voting for the Oily
Rag Party on election day”!
You can add our favourite
penny pinching policy by visiting the oily rag website or
write to Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag, PO Box 984,
Whangarei. The book Living off the Smell of an Oily
Rag by Frank & Muriel Newman is available online at
www.oilyrag.co.nz.
* Frank and Muriel Newman are the
authors of Living Off the Smell of an Oily Rag in NZ.
Readers can submit their oily rag tips on-line at www.oilyrag.co.nz. The book is available
from bookstores and online at www.oilyrag.co.nz.