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Party promises free fruit

Party promises free fruit

By Frank and Muriel Newman

Hoardings with smiley faces have appeared like spring mushrooms and politicians are making their three-yearly pilgrimage to your door to share their love - it must be election time.

Not to be denied a soapbox, the Oily Rag community has been out on the hustings, meeting and greeting in supermarket isles, smiling much while saying little, seeing every infant with a runny nose as a photo opportunity rather than a health risk, and generally encouraging people to give that all important tick of approval to the oily rag cause. Our party message is an all-inclusive one: "Happiness through frugality - delivering a better brighter future for New Zealand. Let's frugal this - love frugality".

"Our frugal faithful have even gone as far as publishing the Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag Party Manifesto”.

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 a Kiwi at heart. It’s about being a proud and happy husband, wife, partner, father, mother or caregiver so you can look forward to a secure and prosperous future for your children and their children and the children of others if you don't happen to have any. It’s about having a warm, well insulated house without any damp, that we can call a happy home, where you are the master of your money. That’s our hope, that’s our vision for a nation of many peoples united not by the colour of their flag but by a single cause: Frugality. And that’s why you should cast a vote for the Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag Party on 23 September. You deserve it, New Zealand.”

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Here are some of our key election policies.

Workplace policy

• Cut lunches for all – it’s guaranteed to save you heaps.

Free fruit and vegetables

• Cost-free fruit and vegetables for all. The Oily Rag Party believes families should not have to pay for fruit and vegetables – they should grow their own. Why complain about the high price of tomatoes or spuds, parsnips or carrots, leeks or silver beet, apples or oranges, when growing your own is easy and much cheaper – and it stops you worrying about where the produce is really gown, and what’s in it. A house is not a home without a garden, we say.

Recycling

• We have a waste-not want-not policy, and that means anything that would usually go to the tip gets a second life. No more will you hear someone say, "I wish I hadn’t tossed that out". We have strong policies in this area and when the Oily Rag Party is elected to high office on23 September we will make it unlawful to throw out a piece of paper if it has one unused side.

Transport policy

• Other parties may be building roads but we are bridging the divided between having money and not. Reducing your speed from 110 km to 100 km will result in a 15% fuel saving - and we will ban speeding tickets by banning speeding! Maniac type driving not only costs money it aggravates everyone, endangers yourself, your passengers and other voters - and every vote matters.

Animal welfare policy

• Take the dog for a walk instead of a ride in the car.

The economy

• Use half as much and get the product at half price!

• Any debt is a bad debt. It takes five minutes to get into debt, and a lifetime to get out of it.

• Cheap is good but free is awesome - let's do this.

• Idle time is a waste. Working for a charity is better than not working at all.

KiwiSaver

• Every Kiwi should be a saver and would be if they lived off the smell of an oily rag. As a famous person once said, "Without frugality none can be rich, and with it very few would be poor." Rich may be taking things a bit far, just having no money worries is a good oily rag aim.

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 New Zealand. Be a proud Oily Rag Kiwi - vote for a better future by voting for the Oily Rag Party on Election Day. You deserve it”.

If you have a favourite penny pinching policy you would like to share, please drop us a note via oilyrag.co.nz or write to Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag, PO Box 984, Whangarei.

*Frank and Muriel Newman are the authors of Living Off the Smell of an Oily Rag in NZ. Read our wealth of tips on the Oily Rag website at www.oilyrag.co.nz.


ENDS


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