Features
“MAY THEY ALL ROT IN HELL, AGAIN, MERRY CHRISTMAS”
TRUMP’S CHRISTMAS MESSAGE OF PEACE AND GOODWILL TO OPPONENTS:
by Vijaya Chandrasoma
As we complete another eventful year, I would like to apologize for the many shortcomings I have displayed over the years. The most common complaint has been that my essays are tediously lengthy and boring.
The second complaint is that my obsession with Trump has become annoyingly tiresome. In my defense and contrary to the teachings of psychiatry and all religions, that hatred is self-destructive, my loathing of Trump has been of enormous therapeutic relief to me. Hatred that has made me a better person, because all the evil in my heart is reserved exclusively for the “Stable Genius”.
Trump’s unhinged and profane Christmas message on his Truth Social media network is addressed to those who recognize him for the narcissistic crook he is. He chooses this time of sanctity, not only for Christians but to people of every faith, who embrace and celebrate the universal message of Peace on Earth and Goodwill to All, to spew the very essence of blasphemy.
“Merry Christmas to Crooked Joe, the out-of-control Deranged Jack Smith….and the SICK THUGS who are looking to destroy our once great USA”. Ending with “ROT IN HELL” as headlined above. Trump is a sick psychopath, nutty as a Christmas fruitcake.
Sadly, his visions of dictatorship and revenge appeal to his Republican base, who see him as the Savior who will take Hitler-like steps to save their worst nightmare of the loss of white privilege; that the country will fall under the yoke of an invasion of brown-skinned immigrants who will poison the pure blood of the rightful owners of the USA, the Christian white supremacists.
I thought it would be appropriate to end the year with a record of the legislative inaction of the Republican House, with just 22 laws passed this year, out of a total of 700 laws pending. The previous record for legislative inactivity was in 2011, when 73 laws were passed. Brevity would therefore be a given, and my best intentions to contain my propensity for prolixity would have been admirably served.
Unfortunately, the vulgarity of the Christmas wishes of the crass Trump hit the headlines, and I could not resist the temptation of reporting on a subject that highlights, as if any more highlighting were necessary, the vengeful lunacy of the former president. So brevity again went down the tubes.
Conservative Republican Congressman from Texas, Chip Roy agrees with my contention that the Republican Party has done very little this year. He recently took to the House floor to tear into his fellow Republicans. “Our party has become a complete, useless dumpster fire that does nothing to help the American people; because it is too busy investigating the president’s son, kissing the last president’s ass, and fighting each other….For the life of me, I want my Republican colleagues to give me one thing – just one – that I can say to my constituents that we have done to help the American people”.
I can give him three, but instead of helping the American people, they have only focused on the Party’s disunity, in competition as to who kissed the former president’s ass most unctuously, initiated an evidence-free Impeachment Inquiry against President Biden and ruined Santa’s Christmas.
For starters, Republicans fired Speaker Kevin McCarthy, whose ten-month tenure ended when he became the first Speaker in history to be ousted by members of his own party, hardline Trumpers with the brownest of noses.
On September 30, in a rare moment of empathy for his fellow Americans, McCarthy acted against the wishes of Trump, voting with the Democrats to avoid a government shutdown that would have caused chaos and embarrassed the Biden administration. Unfortunately for him, this is the only goal, the raison d’etre of Trump and his party. So he had to go.
In a poignant speech when he surrendered the Speaker’s gavel, McCarthy stated, to an almost empty chamber, “Do not be fearful if you believe your philosophy brings people more freedom. Do not be fearful that you could lose your job over it”.
We all remember McCarthy pleading with Trump over the telephone to call off the rioters, from the floor of Congress, during the January 6 insurrection. An expletive-filled shouting match resulted when Trump refused, ending with a furious McCarthy shouting at Trump, as the rioters were breaking into his office, “Who the f… do you think you are talking to”, before fleeing to safety.
Directly after the insurrection, McCarthy excoriated Trump, in Congress, for his complicity in the assault on the Capitol. Three weeks later, however, fearful of losing his job, he visited Trump at Mar a Lago, cap in hand and kissed the ring, showing us exactly who the f… he really was, how fearful he was about losing his job and how little he cares about the freedom of the people.
After ejecting McCarthy, the Republicans elected as their new Speaker Louisiana Congressman and avid Trumper, Mike Johnson, a backbencher who suddenly found himself to be second-in-line to the presidency, after VP Kamala Harris. Part of his six years’ experience in the House was his ardent support of Trump’s violent January 6, 2021 insurrection. Johnson is a devoted Christian who believes that the US is governed not by the Constitution but by the Bible, the current Republican version, according to which the “Orange Jesus” is the Son of God.
The Republicans, who have been trying to impeach President Biden since the day of his inauguration, voted, on December 13 to formally authorize an Impeachment Inquiry into President Biden. An evidence-free Inquiry into the yet unknown high crimes and misdemeanors (the constitutional requirement for the impeachment of a president) committed by the President. An earlier Inquiry fell through when the first of their “expert witnesses” opened with the admission that their investigation had uncovered no impeachable evidence against President Biden.
Republican Congressman James Comer, chief architect of the current Inquiry, was asked by Steve Doocy during an interview on Republican-friendly Fox News, for details of the high crimes and misdemeanors committed by Biden. Comer said that such evidence was what the Inquiry was intended to find, based on that famous American legal principle that “a man is guilty until proved innocent”.
Maryland Democratic Congressman Jamie Raskin compared the proposed impeachment to one of Agatha Christie’s famous “Whodunit” mystery novels. The only difference being that the “who” and the “dun” are known, but the “it” is the real mystery.
The real reason for the impeachment of Biden was Trump’s plaintive, kindergarten cry: “Mommy, mommy, he started it. He did it to me, so we must do it to him!”
The Republicans enacted earth-shattering legislation last week, that public schools should serve schoolkids whole milk instead of low-fat milk, which had hitherto been on the cafeteria menu. Legislation that took precedence over funding for Ukraine and Israel, the climate crisis, gun violence and other relatively insignificant problems that could easily be postponed till after the holidays.
In an attempt to promote a healthy diet in school meals, Republican Congresswoman from North Carolina, Virginia Foxx, waxed eloquent on the benefits of whole milk in one of the finest political orations since Rev. Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech in 1963.
“It’s Christmas time in America, with the tradition of leaving milk and cookies out for Santa and his reindeer to enjoy. It is a tradition in my family to leave only whole milk with the cookies. We only want the best nutritional option for Santa.
“Whole milk provides the nutrients like calcium, protein and Vitamin D to enable Santa to circle the globe in one night. It helps build and repair his muscles, necessary for hoisting heavy sacks of gifts up and down chimneys; it keeps Santa’s bones strong as he dashes from rooftop to rooftop; and whole milk is essential to keep Santa warm as he braves the cold wintry night.
“You see, it’s just not the magic of the season that helps Santa deliver presents worldwide – it’s also the fortifying nutrients of whole milk”.
Ms. Foxx’s dream was that one day, all public schools in America will recognize the value of whole milk, which will surely provide the nutrition necessary for all children to successfully complete their math homework, irrespective of the color of their skin or the content of their character.
Santa had heard rumors about the Republican whole milk plans before embarking on his annual trek. Shivers ran down his spine, not only because it was freezing cold in the North Pole. He had sent an urgent message to Congresswoman Foxx, long before Christmas Eve, that his reindeer, except for Rudolf, whose nose was suspiciously red, did enjoy whole milk during their arduous journey. As for himself, he would appreciate it if the nice people would leave him a large shot of single malt Scotch whiskey with the cookies, which would more effectively fortify him, and keep him snug and warm while dashing on rooftops and down chimneys on that cold wintry night.
Santa made this earnest request because Mrs. Claus, in her capacity as President of the North Pole, had recently enforced Prohibition in that continent. Santa had been forced to drink bootleg booze the past few months, and had been looking forward to a decent drink on Christmas Eve, as do we all.
Alas, his message had fallen on deaf years, and he had to drink that awful whole milk with his cookies. His traditionally booming “Ho Ho Ho” was strangely muted.
The Republican Congress added to their “achievements”, the denial of a woman’s fundamental rights to reproductive freedom, with a decision that could only be described as sadistically inhumane. A cynical ruling made by a few old white geezers who barely know what the hell a uterus is.
Ms. Kate Cox, married with two children, is a resident of Texas. A deep-red state with Draconian laws, Texas banned abortion under virtually any and all circumstances last year.
Ms. Cox sued to obtain an abortion after learning that her fetus had a fatal chromosomal condition and spinal abnormalities. Her doctor had informed her that there was no chance her unborn baby would survive birth or live for a few hours afterwards. A continuing pregnancy would jeopardize not only her own life, but also her future fertility. Tragically, abortion was her only option.
A lower court judge ruled in favor of Ms. Cox’s immediate abortion, but the Texas Supreme Court overruled that decision. Ken Paxton, the Texas Attorney General, threatened to punish any doctor who provided Ms. Cox an abortion. Ms. Cox was forced to flee Texas and have the procedure done in a state with more humanitarian values.
With the election looming in November, the Republican House will likely continue to block every progressive measure proposed by the Biden administration. We can only hope that the economy will continue to thrive in the new year. More importantly, that moderate Republicans and Independents will finally realize that Trump, if allowed to contest and is elected to the presidency, will bring about an era of authoritarian terror, the white supremacist version of the Spanish Inquisition, from which the nation may never recover.
There are hopeful signs that many such moderate Republicans and Independents are beginning to feel apprehension and tiring of Trump’s continuing dangerous rhetoric, his monotonous whining that he is the victim of a perennial witch-hunt. Rival Republican candidate Nikki Haley seems to be gaining momentum to be a live threat to eat into Trump’s substantial lead in the Republican polls.
If she upsets Trump for the Republican nomination, or if Trump is constitutionally or criminally disqualified from seeking re-election, she would be a worthy, moderate candidate, a skilled politician to challenge President Biden, whom she currently leads by double digits in the polls in a head-to-head presidential race. In fact, she may attract votes from many Democrats who feel that Biden’s advanced age is a distinct problem.
And happily, Trump will finally face accountability for all the violent and treasonous crimes he has committed in a desperate attempt to remain in power and so avoid certain imprisonment.I wish readers a happy, healthy, Trump-free 2024, more with trepidation than confidence for the democratic future of the United States.
Features
Social and political aspects of Buddhism in a colonial context
I was recently given several books dealing with religion, and, instead of looking at questions of church union in current times, I turned first to Buddhism in the 19th century. Called Locations of Buddhism: Colonialism and Modernity in Sri Lanka, the book is a study by an American scholar, Anne M Blackburn, about developments in Buddhism during colonial rule. It focuses on the contribution of Ven. Hikkaduwe Sri Sumangala who was perhaps the most venerated monk in the latter part of the 19th century.
Hikkaduwe, as she calls Ven. Sumangala through the book, is best known as the founder of the Vidyodaya Pirivena, which was elevated to university statues in the fifties of this century, and renamed the University of Sri Jayewardenepura in the seventies. My work in the few years I was there was in the Sumangala Building, though I knew little about the learned monk who gave it its name.
He is also renowned for having participated in the Panadura debates against Christians, and having contributed to the comparative success of the Buddhist cause. It is said that Colonel Olcott came to Sri Lanka after having read a report of one of the debates, and, over the years, Ven. Sumangala collaborated with him, in particular with regard to the development of secondary schools. At the same time, he was wary of Olcott’s gung ho approach, as later he was wary of the Anagarika Dharmapala, who had no fear of rousing controversy, his own approach being moderate and conciliatory.
While he understood the need for a modern education for Buddhist youngsters, which Olcott promoted, free of possible influences to convert which the Christian schools exercised, he was also deeply concerned with preserving traditional learning. Thus, he ensured that in the pirivena subjects such as astrology and medicine were studied with a focus on established indigenous systems. Blackburn’s account of how he leveraged government funding given the prevailing desire to promote oriental studies while emphatically preserving local values and culture is masterly study of a diplomat dedicated to his patriotic concerns.
He was, indeed, a consummately skilled diplomat in that Blackburn shows very clearly how he satisfied the inclinations of the laymen who were able to fund his various initiatives. He managed to work with both laymen and monks of different castes, despite the caste rivalry that could become intense at times. At the same time, he made no bones about his own commitment to the primacy of the Goigama caste, and the exclusiveness of the Malwatte and Asgiriya Chapters.
What I knew nothing at all about was his deep commitment to internationalism, and his efforts to promote collaboration between Ceylon Lanka and the Theravada countries of South East Asia. One reason for this was that he felt the need for an authoritative leader, which Ceylon had lost when its monarchy was abolished by the British. Someone who could moderate disputes amongst monks, as to both doctrine and practice, seemed to him essential in a context in which there were multiple dispute in Ceylon.
Given that Britain got rid of the Burmese monarchy and France emasculated the Cambodian one, with both of which he also maintained contacts, it was Thailand to which he turned, and there are records of close links with both the Thai priesthood and the monarchy. But in the end the Thai King felt there was no point in taking on the British, so that effort did not succeed.
That the Thai King, the famous Chulalongkorn, did not respond positively to the pleas from Ceylon may well have been because of his desire not to tread on British toes, at a time when Thailand preserved its independence, the only country in Asia to do so without overwhelming British interventions, as happened for instance in Nepal and Afghanistan, which also preserved their own monarchies. But it could also have been connected with the snub he was subject to when he visited the Temple of the Tooth, and was not permitted to touch the Tooth Relic, which he knew had been permitted to others.
The casket was taken away when he leaned towards it by the nobleman in charge, a Panabokke, who was not the Diyawadana Nilame of the day. He may have been entrusted with dealing with the King, as a tough customer. Blackburn suggests it is possible the snub was carefully thought out, since the Kandyan nobility had no fondness for the low country intercourse with foreign royalty, which seemed designed to take away from their own primacy with regard to Buddhism. The fact that they continued subservient to the British was of no consequence to them, since they had a façade of authority.
The detailed account of this disappointment should not, however, take away from Ven. Sumangala’s achievement, and his primacy in the country following his being chosen as the Chief Priest for Adam’s Peak, at the age of 37, which placed him in every sense at the pinnacle of Buddhism in Ceylon. Blackburn makes very clear the enormous respect in which he was held, partly arising from his efforts to order ancient documents pertaining to the rules for the Sangha, and ensure they were followed, and makes clear his dominant position for several decades, and that it was well deserved.
by Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha
Features
Achievements of the Hunduwa!
Attempting to bask in the glory of the past serves no purpose, some may argue supporting the contention of modern educationists who are advocating against the compulsory teaching of history to our youth. Even the history they want to teach, apparently, is more to do with the formation of the earth than the achievements of our ancestors! Ruminating over the thought-provoking editorial “From ‘Granary of the East’ to a mere hunduwa” (The Island, 5th March), I wished I was taught more of our history in my schooldays. In fact, I have been spending most of my spare time watching, on YouTube, the excellent series “Unlimited History”, conducted by Nuwan Jude Liyanage, wherein Prof. Raj Somadeva challenges some of the long-held beliefs, based on archaeological findings, whilst emphasising on the great achievements of the past.
Surely, this little drop in the Indian ocean performed well beyond its size to have gained international recognition way back in history. Pliny the Elder, the first-century Roman historian, therefore, represented Ceylon larger than it is, in his map of the world. Clicking on (https://awmc.unc.edu/2025/02/10/interactive-map-the-geography-of-pliny-the-elder/) “Interactive Map: The Geography of Pliny the Elder” in the website of the Ancient World Mapping Centre at the University of North Carolina at Chappel Hill, this is the reference to Anuradhapura, our first capital:
“The ancient capital of Sri Lanka from the fourth century BCE to the 11th century CE. It was recorded under the name Anourogrammon by Ptolemy, who notes its primary political status (Basileion). It has sometimes been argued that a “Palaesimundum” mentioned by Pliny in retelling the story of a Sri Lankan Embassy to the emperor Claudius is also to be identified with Anourogrammon. A large number of numismatic finds from many periods have been reported in the vicinity.”
Ptolemy, referred to above, is the mathematician and astronomer of Greek descent born in Alexandria, Egypt, around 100 CE, who was well known for his geocentric model of the universe, till it was disproved 15 centuries later, by Copernicus with his heliocentric model.
It is no surprise that Anuradhapura deservedly got early international recognition as Ruwanwelisaya, built by King Dutugemunu in 140 BCE, was the seventh tallest building in the ancient world, perhaps, being second only to the Great Pyramids of Giza, at the time of construction. It was overtaken by Jetawanaramaya, built by King Mahasena around 301 CE, which became the third tallest building in the ancient world and still holds the record for the largest Stupa ever built, rising to a height of 400 feet and made using 93.3 million baked mud bricks. Justin Calderon, writing for CNN travel under the heading “The massive megastructure built for eternity and still standing 1,700 years later” (https://edition.cnn.com/travel/jetavanaramaya-sri-lanka-megastructure-anuradhapura) concludes his very informative piece as follows:
“Jetavanaramaya stands today as evidence of an ancient society capable of organising labour, materials and engineering knowledge on a scale that rivalled any civilisation of its time.
That it remains relatively unknown beyond Sri Lanka may be one of history’s great oversights — a reminder that some of the ancient world’s most extraordinary achievements were not carved in stone, but shaped from earth, devotion and human ingenuity.”
Extraordinary achievements of our ancestors are not limited to Stupas alone. As mentioned in the said editorial, our country was once the Granary of the East though our present leader equated it to the smallest measure of rice! Our canal systems with the gradient of an inch over a mile stand testimony to engineering ingenuity of our ancestors. When modern engineers designed the sluice gate of Maduru Oya, they were pleasantly surprised to find the ancient sluice gates designed by our ancestors, without all their technical knowhow, in the identical spot.
Coming to modern times, though we vilify J. R. Jayewardene for some of his misdeeds later in his political career, he should be credited with changing world history with his famous speech advocating non-violence and forgiveness, quoting the words of the Buddha, at the San Francisco Conference in 1945. Japan is eternally grateful for the part JR played in readmitting Japan to the international community, gifting Rupavahini and Sri Jayewardenepura Hospital. Although we have forgotten the good JR did, there is a red marble monument in the gardens of the Great Buddha (Daibutsu) in Kamakura, Japan with Buddha’s words and JR’s signature.
It cannot be forgotten that we are the only country in the world that was able to comprehensively defeat a terrorist group, which many experts opined were invincible. Services rendered by the Rajapaksa brothers, Mahinda and Gotabaya, should be honoured though they are much reviled now, for their subsequent political misdeeds. Though Gen-Z and the following obviously have no recollections, it is still fresh in the minds of the older generation the trauma we went through.
It is to the credit of the democratic process we uphold, that the other terrorist group that heaped so much of misery on the populace and did immense damage to the infrastructure, is today in government.
As mentioned in the editorial, it is because Lee Kuan Yew did not have a ‘hundu’ mentality that Singapore is what it is today. He once famously said that he wanted to make a Ceylon out of Singapore!
Let our children learn the glories of our past and be proud to be Sri Lankan. Then only they can become productive citizens who work towards a better future. Resilience is in our genes and let us facilitate our youth to be confident, so that they may prove our politicians wrong; ours may be a small country but we are not ‘hundu’!
By Dr Upul Wijayawardhana
Features
Nepal’s Mirage of Change
The election in Nepal last week was not merely a political exercise; it was an eruption of pentup fury, a rejection of the old guard that had throttled any semblance of progress for decades. But what now stares the country in the face is a stark question: have the people truly changed their future, or simply traded one set of illusions for another?
For years, Nepalis endured the same trio of power brokers — the Nepali Congress, the CPNUML, and the socalled Communist Party — as these entities pirouetted through government halls, recycled leadership, and maintained an endless cycle of impressive promises and microscopic delivery. Institutions decayed, corruption metastasized, unemployment worsened further. Youth unemployment stands north of 20 per cent — more than double the national average. Around 1,500 young Nepalis leave their homeland every single day seeking work abroad, a staggering exodus that undermines any future the country might hope to sculpt for itself.
So, when the uprising erupted, when Gen Z and youth frustration boiled over into the streets, it was not just rage — it was despair. For a generation raised on unfulfilled promises, the old guard simply had no authority left to persuade a battered population of its relevance. History remembers political decay, but seldom the emotional collapse that precedes a revolt.
Into this void surged Balendra Shah, the rapperturnedKathmandu mayor better known as Balen. He became the face of something many claimed they wanted: a break with the past. The Rastriya Swatantra Party (RSP), a party as new as its leader’s rise from outside the entrenched political class, swept to an unprecedented majority: 125 of the 165 firstpastthepost seats. A single party holding nearly twothirds control in Nepal is almost unheard of, a brutal indictment of the old establishment’s collapse.
Yet, beneath the celebrations, the mood of unrestrained optimism conceals something far darker: a population battered into radical decisionmaking by emotion, not strategy. It is a politics driven not by reflection, debate, or longterm planning, but by hatred — hatred of “corrupt leaders,” hatred of stagnation, hatred of a system that failed to deliver rice (dal bhat), work, dignity. This emotional current, once unleashed, is merciless. It propels movements forward with the force of steam but leaves them to sputter once the fire runs out.
Nepal’s new leadership inherited not opportunity but catastrophe. The economic foundation is weak and brittle. Public debt hovers around 40–45 per cent of GDP, but it is the quality of the economy that terrifies: a narrow tax base, enormous dependence on remittances accounting for roughly onequarter of GDP, and a private sector too fragile to absorb the burgeoning army of young jobseekers. Tourism, once thought a panacea, remains exquisitely sensitive to global disruptions. Agriculture remains archaic and unproductive. Power outages and distribution inefficiencies plague even the most basic enterprises. Crucially, the labour force — the very youth that marched in protests — has no obvious outlet for meaningful employment.
The RSP manifesto, the socalled “2082 Vision,” is nothing if not audacious: 1.2 million jobs in five years; GDP expansion to almost $100 billion; per capita income rising to $3,000; 15,000 megawatts of installed capacity; halving LPG imports; digital services exports of $30 billion in ten years; the construction or upgrade of 30,000 kilometres of national highways. These numbers are ambitious — some might say visionary — but independent observers see them as fantasy built on the emotional reservoir of hope, not on deeply rooted economic analysis. Nepal’s energy grid cannot reliably distribute current capacity; transportation infrastructure routinely buckles under seasonal rains; foreign direct investment remains underwhelming; and the digital economy is throttled by regulatory unpredictability and an underdeveloped legal regime for international payments.
These are the grim realities. A promise to reduce imports without addressing critical bottlenecks in trade policy or crossborder logistics is a promise destined for frustration. A pledge to build tens of thousands of kilometres of roads without sustained institutional capacity to manage land acquisition, competitive bidding, quality control, and anticorruption oversight offers little more than ritual groundbreaking and even more ceremonial delays.
This mismatch between aspirational rhetoric and structural capacity points to a far more troubling truth: Nepalis have been deceived not by individuals but by narratives. The uprising was not wrong in its desire for change. But it was driven by visceral emotion — a collective impulse to reject the old, often without a coherent alternative blueprint that could realistically transform the economy and provide stability. Angry protests and street fervour commandeered the engine of politics, and once that engine is running on emotion rather than evidence, it becomes dangerously unpredictable.
Look at Chile. Gabriel Boric was once lauded as a youthful saviour, riding a wave of antiestablishment fervour following mass protests. He came to power promising transformation, only to be bogged down by economic crises, political fragmentation, and opposition so ferocious that his capacity to govern was severely curtailed. Boric faced impeachment, suffered plummeting approval ratings, and struggled to balance reformist zeal with the weight of practical governance. If Nepal is honest with itself, it must question whether Balen may tread a similar path: overwhelmed by the emotional thunder that elevated him, yet unprepared to deliver the institutional and economic stability the nation desperately needs.
Here’s the painful truth: Gen Z politics, fuelled by emotion, creates momentum but not mechanisms. Momentum wins rallies; mechanisms build nations. The current administration’s inexperience — not merely in government, but in managing a modern economy under immense pressure — sets the stage for something grim: a crescendo of disappointed expectations. When job creation fails to materialize at the promised scale, when infrastructure projects lag, when remittances cool and capital flight accelerates, the emotional energy that once propelled this movement may transform into a bitter sense of betrayal. That betrayal has a name in political history: radicalization without deliverables.
Worse still, emotional politics is ripe for exploitation by external actors. Nepal is geostrategically hemmed in by its two giant neighbours. India — the largest source of trade, investment, energy supplies, and transit routes — watches with both interest and caution. China, shareholder in multiple infrastructure ventures and a central actor in Belt and Road projects, has its own expectations. Both have engaged with the RSP, seeking alignment with their own strategic interests. But emotion is a currency external powers love to leverage: where national confidence is high and institutional clarity is low, foreign influence finds entry points. A government fuelled by public passion — but lacking robust policy anchors — becomes pliable, attractive, and dangerous.
The question is: did the electorate truly choose a path to prosperity, or merely a dream of it? Emotional politics gave the people a mirror — a reflection of their hurt, their labour unrecognized, their aspirations denied. But mirrors do not map roads; they only reveal what is already before us.
Balenomics may become a lesson in hubris — not because the goals are unworthy, but because goals without disciplined implementation, institutional reform, and credible governance remain poetry when the country needs engineering. Nepal needs a systemic recalibration of labour markets, transparent rulemaking, competitive commerce, legal certainty for investments, and infrastructural credibility — not just slogans that rouse crowds.
When citizens see delays, when promised jobs fail to materialise, when inflation stubbornly erodes incomes, and when foreign capital does not flood in simply because of optimism, the inevitable question will surface: was this all just emotional theatre? If the answer is yes, Nepal risks entering a phase worse than the old guard’s mismanagement: disillusionment with revolt itself.
by Nilantha Ilangamuwa
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