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Kamala maintains lead in all the polls, national and swing-states

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by Vijaya Chandrasoma

The nomination process of the contenders for the election of the President of the United States on November 5 has now been finalized.The Republican nomination was concluded at the end of the Republican National Convention in June, 2024, when former President Donald J. Trump and Ohio Senator J.D. Vance were nominated to the Republican presidential ticket.

The nomination was preceded by a mysterious attempted “assassination” of Donald Trump, when he was speaking at an open-air campaign rally near Butler, Pennsylvania, a few days before the Convention. Trump was shot by a sniper with an AR 15 rifle, and escaped with a “graze” to his earlobe. President Biden has called for an independent investigation of this near-catastrophe, which is ongoing.

One would have thought that news about Trump’s near-death encounter, with the iconic photograph of an act of extreme defiance and courage, raising his arms, shouting the words, “Fight, Fight, Fight” against the line of fire, would have been given the limelight treatment in election campaign advertisements. Especially for a five-time Vietnam war draft-dodger with “bone spurs”, whose only self-confessed “bravery ” was avoiding contracting sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) without using protection while having sex with prostitutes (“my personal Vietnam”) in the 1990s.

The news has been a well-kept secret. Trump, a narcissist, no stranger to self-aggrandization, has made scant reference to his incredible feat of courage and escape from near-death experience, which his supporters claim was due to the divine shield that protects him at all times. Like, I guess, the divine condom that protected him from contracting STDs in the 1990s.

The Democratic Party nominated to the presidential ticket 59-year-old Vice-President, Kamala Harris, as President, and 60-year-old Governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, as Vice President, at the conclusion of the Democratic National Convention.

Third Party Candidate, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., son of Robert F. Kennedy and nephew of JFK, suspended his campaign immediately after the Democratic National Convention last week and threw in his lot with Donald J. Trump.

Ever the political whore, RFK Jr had offered his endorsement earlier to Kamala Harris in exchange for a cabinet position in her administration. Which the Kamala camp had wisely rebuffed.

Trump, however, who has always had a penchant for whores of whatever stripe, considers himself fortunate to gain the endorsement of a member of the legendary Kennedy family, even one who has been disowned and held in contempt by the clan. Trump has much in common with RFK Jr, both being convicted felons, RFK Jr for drug trafficking, Trump for much of the gamut of the penal code.

There are two other candidates still in the race. Dr. Cornell West, 71, academic, historian and progressive political activist, who declared his candidacy in June 2023. A man way ahead of America’s medieval times, West is an independent candidate who has run out of campaign finances and is currently running at under 1% in the national polls. A left-wing candidate who supports the benefits enjoyed, one way or another, by the societies of every developed country in the world – wealth-tax on all billionaire holdings and transactions, a national $27 minimum wage, universal health care, affordable housing and free education, mandated family leave and free pre-K childcare, advanced alternative energy programs to eliminate dependence on fossil fuels and aggressive measures to combat climate change – in fact, all those Commie measures despised by even many regular Americans who suffer under the debunked Ann Rand misconceptions that greed is the only motivator of creation of new inventions and wealth. Dr West recently stated the obvious – that “neither party is speaking to the pressing needs of the poor and working people”. In the richest country in the world.

The other active candidate Dr Jill Stein, 74, physician and environmental activist, is running under the aegis of the Green Party. She was a partner of Dr. Cornell West when he was also running under the Green Party, till he decided to run as an Independent.

Both Dr West and Dr Stein have no earthly hope of winning the presidency, but if they do qualify, which is unlikely, they are both capable of swinging vital votes in favor of Donald Trump.

The presidential contest is still a toss-up according to national polls, though the energy which has been surging for the Harris/Walz ticket shows no signs of abating. The Democrats seem to have finally realized that their decade-long adoption of Michelle Obama’s strategy of “When they go low, we go high” has proved to be an abject failure. Especially now that the Trump campaign has veered to a flurry of putrid, personal sexual attacks against Vice-President Harris.

A new and more aggressive strategy, “When they go low, we kick them in their tiny genitals”, the only language Trump and his cohorts understand, is now being considered by the Democrats. They have been hitherto insulting Trump as an authoritarian, wannabe dictator, his supporters a cult of white supremacist neo-Nazis. Those epithets seemed to bother the Trumpers not at all, I suspect because they take these to be compliments, for they describe them exactly for what they are.

So the current strategy is to ridicule them, mock them on their various conspiracy theories and blatant lies, like windmills causing cancer, Lysol curing Covid and Trump’s obsession with his “crowd size” as President Obama did last week. This seems to be working as they are being driven to a manic rage of insecurity resulting in desperation.

Taunt Trump about the blonde weasel on his head, the fake orange spray tan, mock his third-grade vocabulary, his ignorant economic ideas, ridicule the size and mushroom-shaped genitals as described by Stormy Daniels; that he farts himself to sleep during court appearances in New York and remind him of his servitude to Russian President Putin, his ridiculous “love affair” with murderous North Korean dictator, Kim Jung Un, love letters and all. These are provable facts, and they bring out the real, weak, insecure Donald Trump, not the strongman he tries to project himself. The psychopath who will be driven to even more outrageous lies, insults and impossible claims, the only line of defense he knows, which is now becoming increasingly stale.

Trump is already showing steroid-level signs of such desperate lies, He is vacillating on reproductive rights, overturning of Roe v. Wade, which, a few months ago, he was sounding off as one of his greatest achievements. He is guaranteeing tax cuts for all, higher wages, zero inflation, clean air and water, end to all wars, without any plan, just with a wave of his golden wand. He is exposing his ignorance in economic policies when he promises to fight inflation with higher tariffs on imports, as he doesn’t comprehend high tariffs will be paid by US consumers, resulting in higher prices.

His lies are also getting to be increasingly creative and entertaining, with not even a pretense to veracity. The latest whopper is worth reporting.

Trump says that some years ago, he was on a helicopter ride with the then San Francisco Mayor, Willie Brown. The chopper developed engine trouble and they were plunging to their death. The 60-year-old Brown, then one of the most prominent politicians in California, had famously had a romantic affair in the 1990s with then rising political star in California, Kamala Harris. There had been no secret at all in this consensual relationship between two single people – Brown was legally separated at the time, Kamala single and gorgeous.

At this moment of impending doom, according to Trump, Brown turned to him and said, “this might be of no use to you now, but do you remember that lady I was going out with, the prosecutor? Well, before we die, I just want you to know, she’s the worst. She’s a terrible woman. I don’t want to meet my maker without giving you this information. If we survive this crash, I am happy I was able to give this information to you, you may need it someday”!

When a reporter asked Willie Brown, who is now a sprightly 90-year-old, about this story, he said. “No, are you kidding me? I hardly know the man. I have never talked to him about Kamala, who is a dear friend. In any event, do you think I would talk about with a stranger a relationship I had with a lady years ago at the very moment I was facing death?” The obvious inference is that Trump is batshit crazy.

Brown went on, “When I first heard this story, I just assumed he had been on a bumpy helicopter ride with some black person and assumed it was me. I guess to Donald, all us Black guys look alike.”

In an interview with CBS News last week, Brown reiterated that he had never been in a helicopter with Trump and threatened to sue the former president because “somebody has got to make sure he stops lying”. An impossible task. Trump will stop lying only at the moment he stops breathing.

September should prove to be an interesting month.

The one and only presidential debate has been scheduled for September 10, but the terms of the debate have not yet been settled upon. It certainly looks as if Trump has realized the dangers of debating an erstwhile Attorney General of California, who has sent hundreds of rapists and fraudsters like him to prison. My guess is that he will make some excuses, about the channel, moderators, equipment, etc., blame Kamala and dodge the debate. He won’t be able to intimidate a seasoned prosecutor like Kamala with his schoolyard bully tactics. And his fear of strong women, especially strong black women, has been widely documented.

Trump will be facing the sentencing for 34 counts of felonies he was found guilty in the New York hush-money case, on September 18.

Washington DC District Judge Chutkan is determined to start the January 6, 2021 insurrection case during September. In addition, Special Counsel Jack Smith filed a superseding indictment against Trump in this case last Tuesday, focusing on Trump’s role as a candidate and not as the president, which Smith hopes “comports with the US Supreme Court’s controversial immunity ruling and will let the case move forward”.

Kamala dispelled the rumors of her reluctance to hold press conferences after the Convention, when she and Walz sat down with CNN anchor Dana Bash on Thursday night for the first formal unscripted interview of their joint campaign.

She made an initial point about moving on from Donald Trump: “I think in the last decade, we have had in the former president someone who has really been pushing an agenda and an environment that is about diminishing the character and strength of who we are as Americans, really dividing our nation. And I think people are ready to turn the page on that”.

Harris said she has changed her position on some issues, such as fracking and single payer health care, but her values haven’t changed. She said she was proud to have played a part of Biden’s achievements especially after the Covid and economic mess they had inherited, adding the “current administration has achieved extraordinary successes”. But she pitched it as a first step, suggesting that “emerging from economic recovery would free her up to do bigger and better things”.

Harris gave the perfect answer when Dana Bash repeated Trump’s infamously racist question: “For years she was Indian, now she has turned black. What is she?” Harris smiled contemptuously and said: “Next question!”

Walz made little impact, and will probably help Kamala get part of the midwestern vote. He will be an adequate Vice-President. He will also be able to take over as President if something, God forbid, should happen to Kamala. After all, the bar set by Trump is pretty low, as all it needs is an IQ above 70 and fewer than a mixed bag of 91 felonies.

I don’t think the interview did much good nor did it do any harm. It didn’t move the needle much – Kamala still enjoys a slim lead in all the polls, including the swing states.

There are more than two whole months till election day. More than enough time to ridicule Trump, whom Kamala has most appropriately described as a “very unserious man”, to utter humiliation and mock him to that section of hell specially reserved for psychopathic losers.

Hopefully, Republican moderates, even some members of his cult, will see that the emperor has absolutely no clothes, that he is all bluster, lies and balderdash. And should be held accountable for his criminal behavior.



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A long-running identity conflict flares into full-blown war

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Ayatollah Ali Khamenei / President Donald Trump

It was Iran’s first spiritual head of state, the late Ayatollah Khomeini, who singled out and castigated the US as the ‘Great Satan’ in the revolutionary turmoil of the late seventies of the last century that ushered in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The core issue driving the long-running confrontation between Islamic Iran and the West has been religious identity and the seasoned observer cannot be faulted for seeing the explosive emergence of the current war in the Middle East as having the elements of a religious conflict.

The current crisis in the Middle East which was triggered off by the recent killing of Iranian spiritual head of state Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a combined US-Israel military strike is multi-dimensional and highly complex in nature but when the history of relations between Islamic Iran and the West, read the US, is focused on the religious substratum in the conflict cannot be glossed over.

In fact it is not by accident that US President Donald Trump resorts to Biblical language when describing Iran in his denunciations of the latter. Iran, from Trump’s viewpoint, is a primordial source of ‘evil’ and if the Middle East has collapsed into a full-blown regional war today it is because of the ‘evil’ influence and doings of Iran; so runs Trump’s narrative. It is a language that stands on par with that used by the architects of the Iranian revolution in the crucial seventies decade.

In other words, it is a conflict between ‘good’ and ‘evil’ and who is ‘good’ and who is ‘evil’ in the confrontation is determined mainly by the observer’s partialities and loyalties which may not be entirely political in kind. It should not be forgotten that one of President Trump’s support bases is the Christian Right in the US and in the rest of the West and the Trump administration’s policy outlook and actions should not be divorced from the needs of this segment of supporters to be fully made sense of.

The reasons for the strong policy tie-up between Rightist administrations in the US in particular and Israel could be better comprehended when the above religious backdrop is taken into consideration. Israel is the principal actor in the ‘Old Testament’ of the Bible and is seen as ‘the Chosen People of God’ and this characterization of Israel ought to explain the partialities of the Republican Right in particular towards Israel. Among other things, this partiality accounts for the strong defence of Israel by the US.

For the purposes of clarity it needs to be mentioned here that the Bible consists of two parts, an ‘Old’ and ‘New Testament’ , and that the ‘New Testament’ or ‘Message’ embodies the teachings of Jesus Christ and the latter teachings are seen as completing and in a sense giving greater substance to the ‘Old Testament’. However, Judaism is based mainly on ‘Old Testament’ teachings and Judaism is distinct from Christianity.

To be sure, the above theological explanation does not exhaust all the reasons for the war in the Middle East but the observer will be allowing an important dimension to the war to slip past if its importance is underestimated.

It is not sufficiently realized that the Iranian Islamic Revolution of 1979 utterly changed international politics and re-wrote as it were the basic parameters that must be brought to bear in understanding it. So important is the Islamic factor in contemporary world politics that it helped define to a considerable degree the new international political order that came into existence with the collapsing of the Cold War and the disintegration of the USSR .

Since the latter developments ‘political Islam’ could be seen as a chief shaping influence of international politics. For example, it accounts considerably for the 9/11 calamity that led to the emergence of fresh polarities in world politics and ushered in political terrorism of a most destructive kind that is today disquietingly visible the world over.

It does not follow from the foregoing that Islam, correctly understood, inspires terrorism of any kind. Islam proclaims peace but some of its adherents with political aims interpret the religion in misleading, divisive ways that run contrary to the peaceful intents of the faith. This is a matter of the first importance that sincere adherents of the faith need to address.

However, there is no denying that the Islamic Revolution in Iran of 1979 has been over the past decades a great shaper of international politics and needs to be seen as such by those sections that are desirous of changing the course of the world for the better. The revolution’s importance is such that it led to US political scientist Dr. Samuel P. Huntingdon to formulate his historic thesis that a ‘Clash of Civilizations’ is upon the world currently.

If the above thesis is to be adopted in comprehending the principal trends in contemporary world politics it could be said that Islam, misleadingly interpreted by some, is pitting a good part of the Southern hemisphere against the West, which is also misleadingly seen by some, as homogeneously Christian in orientation. Whereas, the truth is otherwise. The West is not necessarily entirely synonymous with Christianity, correctly understood.

Right now, what is immediately needed in the Middle East is a ceasefire, followed up by a negotiated peace based on humanistic principles. Turning ‘Spears into Ploughshares’ is a long gestation project but the warring sides should pay considerable attention to former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami’s memorable thesis that the world needs to transition from a ‘Clash of Civilizations’ to a ‘Dialogue of Civilizations’. Hopefully, there would emerge from the main divides leaders who could courageously take up the latter challenge.

It ought to be plain to see that the current regional war in the Middle East is jeopardising the best interests of the totality of publics. Those Americans who are for peace need to not only stand up and be counted but bring pressure on the Trump administration to make peace and not continue on the present destructive course that will render the world a far more dangerous place than it is now.

In the Middle East region a durable peace could be ushered if only the just needs of all sides to the conflict are constructively considered. The Palestinians and Arabs have their needs, so does Israel. It cannot be stressed enough that unless and until the security needs of the latter are met there could be no enduring peace in the Middle East.

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The art and science of communicating with your little child

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The two input gateways of communication, sight and sound, are quite well developed at birth. In fact, the auditory system becomes functional around 24 weeks in the womb, and the normal newborn can hear quite well after birth. However, the newborn’s vision is a little blurry at birth, and the baby sees the world in shades of grey, while being able only to focus on things 20 to 30 cm (8–12 inches) away. Coincidentally, this is perhaps the exact distance to a mother’s face during breastfeeding. By 2-3 months, there are colour vision capabilities and the ability to track. By 5-8 months, there is depth perception, and by 12 months, there is adult clarity of vision.

By the time a child turns five, his or her brain has already reached 90% of its adult size. This astonishing physical growth is not just happening on its own; it is, to a certain extent, fuelled by experience, and the most vital experience a young child can have is communication with his or her parents.

Modern developmental neuroscience has shifted our understanding of how children learn. We used to think babies were passive sponges, slowly absorbing the world. We now know they are active characters from day one, constantly seeking interaction to build the architecture of their minds. This architecture is not built by apps, vocabulary flashcards, or educational television. It is built through simple, loving, back-and-forth interactions with anyone they come across, but mostly their parents.

The Foundation: Serve and Return (0–12 Months)

Communication with an infant from birth to one year of age begins long before they speak their first word. In the first year, the goal is to master a phenomenon called Serve and Return. This is a basic scenario picked up from the game of tennis. At the start of each game of a set in tennis, a player serves, and the opponent returns the serve. Just imagine a tennis match, where a baby “serves” by making a sound, making eye contact, reaching for a toy, or crying. The job of anyone in the vicinity, who very often are the parents of the baby, is to “return” the ball. If they babble, you babble back. If they point at a cat, you look and say, “Yes, that’s a furry cat!” This simple act does two things. The first is Brain Building, which creates and strengthens neural pathways in the language and emotional centres of the brain. The other is Emotional Security, a thing which teaches a baby that he or she has some help in the learning processes. The baby absorbs the notion that when he or she signals a need, his or her world will respond. This forms the basis of a secure attachment. Scientists have advocated that during this stage, people, especially the parents of a baby, should embrace what is called ‘parentese’. It is the use of a somewhat high-pitched, exaggerated voice. Research has shown that babies pay more attention to parentese than to regular adult speech, helping them to map the sounds of their native language more quickly.

The Language Explosion: Toddlers (1–3 Years)

When a child starts speaking words, the game changes considerably and quite profoundly. This period is defined by a rapid increase in his or her vocabulary and the beginning of grammar. It is very important to narrate everything. The people around, especially the parents, need to become kind of sports commentators for your life. While dressing them, one could say, “First we put on the red sock. After that, we put the other red sock on your left foot.” What we are doing by this is to give them the labels for the world they see.

It is also important to expand, but not truly correct, whatever the child says. If a toddler points to a car and says “Car!”, don’t just say “Yes.” Expand on it: “Yes, that is a big, fast, red car!” You are adding a new vocabulary and grammatical structure through a natural process. If the child says “Me go,” respond with, “Yes, you are going!” rather than correcting and saying “No…, you should say ‘I am going’.”

Toddlers love reading the same book, even one hundred times. While it may be tedious for those around the baby, it is important to realise that such repetition is vital for their learning. They are predicting what comes next, which is a core cognitive skill.

The Preschooler: Building Stories and Logic (3–5 Years)

By age three, the focus shifts from “what” to “why.” Preschoolers are beginning to understand complex emotions, time, and causality. This is the age at which it is best to ask questions which require thought and understanding. Such indirect open-ended questions would sound like “What was the best part of the park today?” or “How do you think that character in the story is feeling?

A preschooler’s world is full of “big feelings” they cannot yet manage. When they are upset because they cannot have a cookie, avoid saying “Don’t cry over nothing.” Instead, name the emotion: “Don’t cry, you can have a cookie after dinner“. This teaches them emotional literacy. Parents and others around in the home could share stories about when they were little, or make up fantasy tales together. Storytelling teaches sequential logic (beginning, middle, end) and strengthens their imagination.

The Absolute Master Class: Learning Through Play

If communication is the fuel for brain development, play is the engine. For a child under five, play is not a break from learning; play is learning. It is how they explore physics (stacking blocks), mathematics (sorting shapes), social dynamics (sharing toys), and language (pretend play). We can boost their development exponentially by weaving communication into their play.

When a child is playing with blocks, dough, or puzzles, they are building fine motor skills and spatial awareness. It is also useful to use three-dimensional words: “Can you put the blue block on top of the red one?” “The puzzle piece is next to your knee.” One could also ask them to describe the texture: “Is the dough soft or hard?

Pretend play, such as acting as a doctor, an engineer, a chef, or a superhero, is one of the most cognitively demanding things a child can do. It requires them to understand symbolic thought and to take on another person’s perspective. Join their world as a supporting character, not the director. If they are the doctor, ask, “Doctor, my teddy bear’s tummy hurts. What should I do?” This encourages them to use vocabulary relevant to the scenario and practice complex social problem-solving.

Playing with water, sand, slime, or safe food products allows children to process sensory information. This is the perfect time for descriptive vocabulary. Use contrasting words: wet/dry, hot/cold, sticky/smooth, loud/quiet.

A few special words for parents. You do not need an expensive degree or specialised toys to build your child’s brain. The most powerful tool you have is your own responsiveness. Modern science tells us that the basic recipe for a thriving child is simple: Look at them when they signal you. Respond with warmth and words. Narrate their world and Join their play.

You are not just talking to your child; you are building his or her future, even via just one conversation at a time. So, go on talking to your child and even make him or her a real-life chatterbox.

Dr B. J. C. Perera

MBBS(Cey), DCH(Cey), DCH(Eng), MD(Paediatrics), MRCP(UK), FRCP(Edin), FRCP(Lond), FRCPCH(UK), FSLCPaed, FCCP, Hony. FRCPCH(UK), Hony. FCGP(SL)

Specialist Consultant Paediatrician and Honorary Senior Fellow, Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.

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Promoting our beauty and culture to the world

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Tourism is very much in the news these days and it’s certainly a good sign to see lots of foreigners checking out Sri Lanka.

With this in mind, Ruki’s Model Academy & Agency recently had a spectacular event to select Mrs. Tourism Sri Lanka in order to promote Sri Lanka in the international scene.

Nimesha Premachandra was crowned Mrs. Tourism Sri Lanka 2026.

She says she owes her success to Ruki (Rukmal Senanayake), the National Director and model trainer, and personality and advocacy trainer Tharaka Gurukanda.

Nimesha is a school teacher by profession, an actress and TV presenter by passion, and an entrepreneur by spirit.

She believes in balancing grace with purpose, and using her platform to inspire women, while promoting the beauty and culture of Sri Lanka to the world. And this is how our Chit-Chat went:

Nimesha Premachandra: Mrs. Tourism Sri Lanka 2026

01. How would you describe yourself?

I am a passionate, disciplined, and people-oriented person. I love learning, performing, and guiding others, especially young minds, through education.

02. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I would probably try to be less self-critical and allow myself to celebrate achievements more often.

03. If you could change one thing about your family, what would it be?

Nothing major. I am grateful for my family’s love and support, which has shaped who I am today.

04. Is Mrs. Tourism Sri Lanka your very first pageant?

No. I have been part of pageants before, but Mrs. Tourism Sri Lanka is very special because it represents purpose, culture, and global representation.

05. What made you take part in this contest?

I wanted to represent Sri Lanka internationally and use this platform to promote tourism, culture, and women’s empowerment.

06. Obviously, you must be excited about participating in the grand finale, in Vietnam; any special plans for this big event?

Yes, I am extremely excited. My focus is to showcase Sri Lankan elegance, hospitality, and authenticity, while building meaningful connections with participants from around the world.

07. How do you intend promoting tourism, in Sri Lanka, during your rein?

I plan to highlight Sri Lanka’s diverse experiences in culture, heritage, wellness, nature, and local hospitality through media appearances, digital storytelling, and tourism collaborations.

08. School?

Kaluthara Balika. School life played a big role in shaping me. I actively participated in sports and performing arts, which later helped me build confidence as an actress and presenter.

09. Happiest moment?

Being crowned Mrs. Tourism Sri Lanka 2026 and seeing the pride in my family’s eyes – definitely one of my happiest moments.

10. What is your idea of perfect happiness?

Peace of mind, good health, and being surrounded by the people I love while doing work that has meaning.

11. Which living person do you most admire?

I most admire Angelina Jolie because she beautifully balances her work as an actress with meaningful humanitarian efforts. She uses her global platform to support refugees, advocate for human rights, and inspire women to be strong, compassionate, and independent.

12. Which is your most treasured possession?

My memories and experiences because they remind me how far I’ve come, and keep me grounded.

13. Your most embarrassing moment?

Like everyone, I’ve had small on-stage mishaps, but they always taught me to laugh at myself and move forward confidently.

14. Done anything daring?

Participating in pageants while balancing teaching, media work, and family life has been one of the boldest and most rewarding decisions I’ve made.

Keen to use her title to promote Sri Lanka globally

15. Your ideal vacation?

A peaceful destination surrounded by nature; somewhere I can relax, reconnect, and experience local culture.

16. What kind of music are you into?

I enjoy soft, soulful music because it helps me relax and stay inspired.

17. Favourite radio station:

I enjoy stations that blend good music with meaningful conversation and positive energy.

18. Favourite TV station:

Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation. It’s where it all began for me. It played a significant role in my journey as a TV presenter and helped shape my confidence and passion for media.

19 What would you like to be born as in your next life?

Someone who continues to inspire others because making a positive impact is what matters most.

20. Any major plans for the future?

I hope to expand my work in media and entrepreneurship while continuing my role as an educator and using my title to promote Sri Lanka globally.

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