In the beginning, there was confusion. Then came policy. And from policy emerged two sacred pillars of national survival; Indomie and Rice.
Thus was born the Republic of Edible Promises.
Every election season in Nigeria begins not with manifestos, but with menu planning. The politicians do not ask, “What do the people need?” They ask, “How many cartons?”
And the people, wise in the arithmetic of survival, respond accordingly.
“Is it one carton per vote,” they ask, “or are we negotiating wholesale democracy this year?”
Indomie, the fast-food deity of urgency, is for the youth. It cooks in two minutes, just like campaign promises. No need for long-term thinking. No need for infrastructure. Just boil water, if there is electricity. If not, improvise. The nation has always been excellent at improvisation.
Rice, on the other hand, is for the elders. It carries prestige, is ceremonial and whispers stability while quietly inflating in price. A bag of rice is not just food, it is a policy document in woven nylon.
Together, they form the twin engines of electoral logistics.
In this system, governance is seasonal. Roads may collapse, hospitals may fade into memory, and education may become a rumour, but Indomie and Rice will arrive, right on schedule, escorted by sirens and moral speeches.
The politician stands before the people and declares: “My brothers and sisters, I have come to empower you.”
Behind him, aides unload cartons.
Empowerment, in this context, is measured in seasoning sachets.
And the people, practical as ever, understand the arrangement. They know that after the election, the politician will disappear into the fortified temples of Abuja, where rice is no longer distributed, it is consumed.
So they collect their share. They smile. They vote.
Not because they believe.
But because, in a land where tomorrow is perpetually under construction, today must be eaten.
Years pass.
The children grow up on Indomie manifestos and rice-based ideologies. They inherit a nation where budgets are abstract, but food distribution is precise. Where GDP is debated, but noodles are delivered.
And when their time comes, they too will gather at the polling units, asking the only question that has ever truly mattered:
“Hope is good, but what are we eating today?”
Thus continues the cycle.
A country where destiny is not written in constitutions or carved into institutions, but packed neatly in cartons and sealed in 5kg bags.
A republic nourished, sustained, and ultimately defined by its most reliable policy instruments:; Indomie and Rice.