The Cairns Post

Get your hands off my sausage

- James Morrow James Morrow is Opinion Editor of The Daily Telegraph

WHAT’S the biggest public health problem in Australia?

If you said smoking or sugar or speeding, you would be wrong.

No, apparently it’s sausage sandwiches.

Specifical­ly, the ones you and I and millions of other Australian­s enjoy every weekend when we go to the local hardware megastore to pick up a few bits and bobs for the day’s DIY project.

The longstandi­ng tradition, which helps raise money for local charity groups who sell sausages folded up in bread for a few bucks, is apparently also the cause of untold mayhem.

You see, for years, oblivious volunteers have been placing fried onions on top of the sausage, rather than tucking them underneath. The problem is that on top, they might fall off — and create a slipping hazard.

“Safety is always our number one priority and we recently introduced a suggestion that onion be placed underneath sausages to help prevent the onion from falling out and creating a slipping hazard,” Bunnings chief operating officer Debbie Poole said, announcing the nationwide diktat which will see only regulation underneath-onions sold from here on out.

Well, good on her. It’s about time someone did something to end the carnage.

Why, only last Saturday I went down to the local Bunnings to pick up a bag of potting soil, some circular saw blades, a set of paint brushes, nine boxes of nails, two mixer taps and a hammer.

When I pulled in to the shop off Parramatta Road there were so many onion-related casualties from the sausage sizzle the car park looked like an episode of M*A*S*H.

Triage tents had been set up to work out who could be fixed up on the spot, who needed to be choppered out, and who required nothing more than the merciful ministrati­ons of a priest brought in to administer the Last Rites.

It’s the same thing every election day, of course, when schoolyard­s across the land become one part polling place, one part emergency ward, thanks to all the careless consumptio­n of sausage and onion sangas on the day.

It was only a matter of time before someone decided that enough was enough.

But while it’s easy to joke about this sort of thing — presumably some other busybody will finally settle the ancient over-under debate over how to hang the toilet paper, with fines and potential jail sentences for violators — there’s also a bigger point about just how much our lives are micromanag­ed, and not just by government­s.

We may regard China’s increasing­ly totalitari­an “social credit” system as something that could only be imposed by a communist government that wants to control the lives of its citizens. But this week news came out of Britain that companies are now looking to microchip their employees in the manner of dogs and cats — all in the name of “improving security” of course. Yeah, right. It’s easy in a country like Australia where there is so much government regulation about, well, just about every single aspect of our lives to forget that the private sector can do more than its fair share of meddling as well.

Those who (rightly) mistrust interferin­g state bureaucrat­s should also spare a thought for what’s imposed on us from the lofty heights of the corporate world, whether it’s silly (in this case) or sinister.

… THERE WERE SO MANY ONION-RELATED CASUALTIES FROM THE SAUSAGE SIZZLE THE CAR PARK LOOKED LIKE AN EPISODE OF M*A*S*H

 ?? Picture: INSTAGRAM ?? NATIONAL DISGRACE: This sort of dangerous sausage and onion placement won’t pass muster under Bunnings’ new sanga regime.
Picture: INSTAGRAM NATIONAL DISGRACE: This sort of dangerous sausage and onion placement won’t pass muster under Bunnings’ new sanga regime.
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