Balanced read: military commander tied to war-end operations, with long-running legal and human-rights controversy.
I bounce between Trump, fast food, Taylor Swift, and voting logic, but the pattern is simple enough: I want politics to feel vivid, entertaining, and worth my attention. By the end, I say it plainly: I like to have fun.
A heavily administrative day about what a tougher Sri Lanka would require: stronger citizens through national service, foreign-policy and sanctions resets, road widening, English for business, strategic oil partnerships,...
The day turns personal scarcity into a political judgment: too little food, too much dependence, too much delay, and a hard insistence that what has happened to Sri Lanka is mainly a leadership failure that the country...
The page starts with a hard defense of Shavendra and the army, then pivots into a more practical question: whether I should stop waiting on platforms like Wix or WordPress and just build the site myself.
Music and half-hidden detours give way to the real public work: a visit to HNB, warnings about hardware risk, irritation at delays and weak local execution, and the growing conviction that the script is still the cleanest...
A page of birds, mythic role-casting, chainsaw jokes, and military satire hardens into a political argument that Sri Lanka now needs outside pressure, financial supervision, and accountability instead of more excuses.
What begins with There Will Be Blood and stray Twitter sightings turns into a practical question about whether the diary should become YouTube entertainment, or whether writing alone is still the right medium for the project.