KIWI RIDER 03 2020 VOL1 | Page 88

MORONEY LIKE WHEELS… IT MAKES THE WORLD GO ROUND Words: Roger Moroney About the money… or the thrill of winning? M oney. There’s a good name for a song... if you were to be a devotee of Pink Floyd, of which I am not. I was when Syd Barrett drove the ship back in the 60s but not after that. But money. Mmmm... quite a talking point is what one has in the pocket. Money, well that was a post-Syd hit for the Floyd, a subject he would never have been part of, as what he was doing was not about that. Just what Syd was actually doing at that stage was anyone’s guess, I guess. Apparently money makes the world go round, according to an old song, and indeed it does. We need this ingredient to life called money, for we live amidst a financially and commercially driven landscape. It’s always been there, in one form or another. We need to make it and we need to spend it, for when we spend it others make it, and they spend it and others, down the track, make it. I think that’s how it works, although my potential as a potential minister of finance has no potential at all. If I make a tenner I spend twenty. Hopeless. The great financial Merry-Go-Round. A simple 86 KIWI RIDER sort of device, although anything financial is far from simple. There are simply too many angles and avenues. Because some will always earn a hell of a lot more than others will ever dream of earning. The only factor we, of the common world, have, is the factor called ‘balance’. Getting things to balance. Income and outgoings. Which I am sure many of you fine folk out there are like me and sum such factors up as “oh she’ll be right” and “what can go wrong?” You know what I mean… I think. Shouldn’t have got the case of ale, a six-pack may have done the job. We all work (well most of us do) and we all earn and we spend and this process is part of the great paper and coinage landscape of life. Or the evolving world of consumerism if you like. Like back in the early days when folk would grow and nurture things and take them to the market (well before the days of TV and tear-tabs of course) and sell them. To make a living. Provide an income. And put tucker on the table and make sure the kids have lunch for school. ‘To make a living’… that is a very traditional and