Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Arch Linux Endeavour OS Installation-Plus Redhat Rocky Linux

Since Endeavour failed I decided to install Rocky (9.5) Linux of Redhat.

It is more than 25 years last I used Redhat and I somehow figured out how new Anaconda works in a graphical test mode.

It's installation is very slow.

It is creating partitions now.

It says it is downloading packages.

It did not configure the WiFi, though.

It is configuring GRUB-2.

Now configuring Systemd.

Now configuring kernel core.x86_64.

No Right side bar information it used to give in good old days.

It is painfully slow that is why can give a running commentary.

Debian Gnome installs in only 20 minutes.

Of course, I had to to go to the toilet for a big one. 

In winter I get dehydrated due to lot of Ceylon Tea and I am bit constipated like Rocky Linux.

Configuring root files.noarch.

Installing boot loader. I beg it to get it right.

What Linux had taught me was patience not treating PC or computer patients.

No animations as in Elive Linux.

Now configuring installed system.

Generating initramfs.

The END and Rebooting.

It got the Plymouth in very DARK MODE not to my likings.

After all it is Gnome Desktop and it did not configure WiFi during Install. It had minimal of software and I could not add any more. 

No Synaptic Software,too.

I am going to erase and install Manjaro, Gnome, last of all, so that I get it's GRUB file OK this time round.

In less than 15 minutes it finished installing. This time round Manjaro got the GRUB file OK. I am installing updates now which is about 1.9GB. Update complete in less than 10 minutes which Endeavour could not. Do not blame me Endeavour.

This is the first time in my life I erased a distribution within 10 minutes and that is Rocky Linux.

I test the new distribution install for at least for 24 hours.

Do not EVER Try Rocky Linux. 

Even though it took 7GB for the Install image, after install it was only 4.1GB.

I am glad i tried it now I can include this encounter in my book, "Linux Essentials".

Regarding installation I make a big mistake of not having a big /bar partition. All the user install applications stay in user/ser folder and it get choked up.

I had to reinstall Manjaro to take that to effect. Basic Manjaro is small about 7.5GB.

I took some space from / root partition to give to /var which I always give a liberal contribution.

I must make a comment about GoBo Linux. It took a wrong decision to change the Linux file system and it became a total failure. It is trying to restore it's lost prestige with little change at all.

I tried once long time ago and it was a pain.

DO NOT try it if one is new to Linux.

Arch Linux Endeavour OS Installation

Installation failed in online but offline installation was smooth. Failure online was due to its inability to configure its many repositories.

Failure was at Sydney and Australians know very little Linux.

Update also failed which I usually do after first install.

In the case of ARCH one has to do it yourself and no automatic updates as in Gnome of Debian. 

If there are further failures I am afraid I a going to ditch Endeavour OS which is a beautiful one.

It has almost all the Desktops except IceWM and Enlightenment which Gnome has and and I used Plasma since I erased Netrunner which was a KDE derivative. I have chosen Endeavour because it is minimal and I hope it will let me install Abiword. 

Last time it did not. 

Not again this time, round.

I am signing off to see how it runs (unlike on virtual mode which I do not prefer except testing). 

I tried the new OS -Fresh OS and it failed.

It took 8.63GB of my  16.92GB /root partition an I have 8.96GB for my applications. 

Do Not believe they guys who recommend 20GB for install. 

If I tried LXDE Desktop it would be even less.

Do Not Get Caught to Zorin OS Guys from United Kingdom

Zorin OS guys coming from United Kingdom are SUCKERS.
They take the Gnome Basic Installation kit unit fit its Basic Instal. 
Their only contribution is Windows Like Wall Papers for the Desktop.
No software.
Then ask you to pay for Open Source Software is unbecoming.
British of my time were not like these guys.
If you try Manjaro Genome for FREE, one gets a very attractive distribution.
Endeavour OS is equally beautiful but has problems with it's repositories.
My advice is to do a cold installation offline and get updates after install.
Good Luck without Zorin.
Zenwalk is out for guys who want to learn the difficult way on a black terminal install.
It is based on Slakware which usually frugal in their approach to Linux.

This is what has hppened to Wycombe Hospital in High Wycombe, I last worked (UK) in 1988

Wycombe Hospital in High Wycombe, UK is undergoing repairs and maintenance while plans are made for a new facility. The hospital is in a 1960s building that's not fit for modern healthcare needs.
Current status

    The hospital is undergoing repairs and maintenance.

Scaffolding and green netting are in place on the main building
The trust is investigating the hospital's structural integrity
The trust has started removing services from the tower
The trust has requested £200m of funding from the government to build a new care center

Future plans

    The trust plans to complete preparatory work, including ground investigations and utilities, before starting detailed designs

The trust plans to gain financial approval to proceed in late 2026
The trust is developing a purpose-built children's emergency department, plus maternity and gynaecological departments

Other information

    The hospital has a breast diagnosis center, breast reconstruction center, and breast surgery center

The hospital provides medical care, critical care, end of life care, and outpatient services


Zenwalk Linux is Born Again Linux

Zenwalk Linux is Born Again Linux
 
Yes, Zenwalk Linux takes me back to early 2000 (though, I did not like it then) when I really work on dumb terminal and Linux Text Book by the side of me and  used fdisk utility
I collected a lot of Linux books, which I left behind in Ceylon (I can carry only 5 kilos and if the baggage did not have wheels on them, I would not have traveled to Australia) and my son in law bought me a Linux Bible, which is by the side of me for academic work.
 
If you want to lean Linux from basic and if you have spare external disk boot Zenwalk Linux this from USB and start installing it.
Work line by line.
 
That is how Linux works. 
Do not go to Vim or Vi, yet.
 
Old age, I do not like a dumb and black terminal with my eyes failing, I am glad I went to graphic intensive Installer like in Gnome and now Elive Linux which is pretty good. 
 
Calamara Installer I am getting comfortable.
 
Some Linux derivatives have gone to haskel and I downloaded few for my Linux Manjaro instillation before i could try Haskel I erased it since its GRUB did not recognize my other Linux derivative in my NUC.

I am favouring Endeavour OS but its is still using Thuna which I hate.

Is Linux Desktop (PC) Growing?

Is Linux Desktop (PC) Growing?
With Linux's adoption growing faster than before, it only took around eight years for the market share to increase from 1% to 2%, and subsequently less than a year to go from 3% to 4%. At this rate of growth, reaching a 5% market share within 2024 is becoming increasingly likely.30 June, 2024

"Modi Boru Baudhayek" - Modi is a Cardboard Buddhist

 "Modi Boru Baudhayek" - Modi is a Cardboard Buddhist
Just like Anura, Modi is a cardboard Buddhist and do not get caught to him.
 
Modi is simply a American stooge.

He has been forgotten’: why humorist Art Buchwald should be remembered

Reproduction

He has been forgotten’: why humorist Art Buchwald should be remembered

He has been forgotten’: why humorist Art Buchwald should be remembered

This article is more than 2 years old

A new biography celebrates the sharp humour and difficult life of the Pulitzer-winning newspaper humourist, once known as ‘the wit of Washington’

David Smith

David Smith in Washington

Tue 7 Jun 2022 15.29 AEST

On the red carpet at the Kennedy Center in Washington in April, the comedian and activist Jon Stewart was asked if he would ever consider running for political office.

“Show business is a good training ground ego and arrogance-wise for politics,” he told the Guardian, “but the art of compromise and the different transactional natures of what they do is generally antithetical to misanthropes who sit in rooms and write jokes. It’s too tempting to blow up meetings.”

That night, when Stewart received the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, the presidential historian Jon Meacham said of him: “He likes to say that he’s not an activist, not a player of the arena, but only an observer. Well, Jon, we love you – but you’re really wrong about that.”

The line between player and observer is worth keeping in mind when considering Art Buchwald, the most widely read newspaper humourist of his time, whose memorial service was held at the Kennedy Center in 2007. Dean Acheson, a former secretary of state, called him the “greatest satirist in the English language since Pope and Swift”.

Buchwald is now the subject of a biography, Funny Business, by the historical researcher Michael Hill, who draws on his most memorable columns and unpublished correspondence. Its dust jacket blurb includes praise from Meacham for an “absorbing, illuminating, and wonderfully entertaining book”.

Columist Art Buchwald costumed as Benedict Arnold. (Photo by Dick Swanson/Getty Images)

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Photograph: Dick Swanson/Getty Images

Buchwald moved in elite circles that included Robert, Edward and Ethel Kennedy, the Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee and publisher Katharine Graham, actors Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall and writers John Steinbeck and Irwin Shaw. But he always regarded himself as an outsider, the court jester who points out that the emperor has no clothes.

Speaking via Zoom from Fredericksburg, Virginia, Hill, 68, says: “He viewed himself as a satirist trying to wake people up about about certain issues. Good political satirists are important if not essential – and I think Buchwald would agree with this – to a healthy democracy. If a bureaucrat is doing something absurd, if a self-involved celebrity is doing something absurd, he felt it was his obligation.

“Buchwald made it his goal to always be anti-establishment. He was against anything that he perceived to be the establishment, but particularly the absurdities of the establishment. He didn’t care what political party it was: he was going to go after them. He felt very strongly about freedom of satire and freedom of speech and he was never going to be muzzled.”

Just after Bill Clinton’s election as president in 1992, for example, a friend approached Buchwald at a party in Georgetown and remarked that, now a Democrat was in the White House for the first time in 12 years, Buchwald would presumably go easy. Hill adds: “Buchwald said, ‘What are you talking about? This is my job you’re talking about. This is what I do.’”

Born in New York in October 1925, Buchwald had a wretched childhood. He almost never saw his his mother, Helen, an immigrant from Hungary, who was admitted to a mental hospital a few weeks after his birth and confined for the remaining 35 years of her life. With his father struggling to pay bills, Buchwald and his sisters were sent to foster homes.

“It left a horrible, dark impression upon him, which is part of the reason that he battled depression for the rest of his life,” Hill explains. “But the positive side of that, if there is one, was that he became very independent early on and he also realised that the only way he was going to be able to survive all the crap life was throwing at him was to be funny, be the class clown, which is what he did. He decided that I’m going to be a funny guy. So that became his goal.”

In the 1940s Buchwald dropped out of high school, joined the marines and served in the second world war. He got wind of an opportunity for veterans to go to Paris and study so bought a one-way ticket to Europe and talked his way into a job at the New York Herald Tribune.

He became the quintessential American in Paris, mingling with Ernest Hemingway and others, and writing popular columns such as “Paris After Dark”, “Mostly About People” and “Europe’s Lighter Side”.

Art Buchwald on Set of Mannix

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Art Buchwald on the set of Mannix. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive

Hill continues: “He said later that those 14 years he spent there were the happiest years of his life. A lot of his friendships that were started in Paris carried over for the rest of his life, particularly Ben Bradlee, who was without doubt one of his closest friends and defenders.”

Some friends advised Buchwald against leaving the high life in Paris but he returned to the US in 1962. He soon established himself through a Washington Post column syndicated in 500 newspapers worldwide. In 1982 he won a Pulitzer prize for outstanding commentary.

Hill explains: “He was able to tap into the beginning of anti-establishment fervour and then, of course, with Watergate, you had a whole new period of not only rebellion but disillusionment.

“He helped people keep their sanity and laugh at things, laugh at the absurdity of politicians and what they were doing. It was a respite from the grim headlines of Vietnam and Watergate and so forth. People were able to take a break and read Buchwald.”

But the brand of humour was less crass or savage than some of Buchwald’s comic heirs. “He said at one point, ‘I don’t go for the jugular’. There was a line that he didn’t cross. He could be sharp, he could be pointed, he wasn’t afraid to go at it but he wasn’t mean-spirited or profane about it.”

Buchwald himself once explained that the key to his humour was to “treat light subjects seriously and serious subjects lightly”. No topic was too big or too small or too esoteric.

Hill continues: “If somebody wanted to have a fun offbeat way to understand the political, cultural, social issues of the 60s, 70s, 80s and even 90s, go back and read Art Buchwald’s columns. He talked about everything. It was not only politicians and bureaucrats but it was celebrities, miniskirts, baggage claims at airports. He touched on everything.”

Hill’s favourite column is from 1964 and entitled “J Edgar Hoover Just Doesn’t Exist”, suggesting that the FBI director was a “mythical person thought up by Reader’s Digest”. It sparked a debate across the country about whether the assertion was actually true. Hoover and the FBI did not see the funny side.

Buchwald’s numerous columns mocking President Lyndon Johnson’s conduct of the Vietnam war ruffled so many feathers that the National Security Agency put him under surveillance. As the conflict worsened, Buchwald proposed sending in superheroes Batman and Robin (the Batman star Adam West saw the column and wrote to Buchwald promising to rush to his rescue if Johnson retaliated).

Naturally “the wit of Washington” also had a field day with President Richard Nixon and the Watergate scandal. “He said he wished Nixon would run for a third term because he was providing such great material.

Art Buchwald in 1977

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Art Buchwald in 1977. Photograph: Mikki Ansin/Getty Images

“He said he’d go after both sides but going after the left was a little bit more delicate because, if he did, they would say, ‘Aren’t you one of us? Why are you doing this?’ It didn’t deter him but he said it took a little bit more courage to take a whack at the left.”

Some of the columns are now eerie historical rhymes. In 1976 he offered “Art’s Gun Control Plan”, demanding a federal mandate to cut off “everybody’s trigger finger at birth” in an effort to curb gun violence in America. “The constitution gives everyone the right to bear arms,” he writes. “But there is nothing that says an American has to have ten fingers.”

In 1989, the celebrity tycoon Donald Trump launched an ill-fated airline with characteristic bluster and invited Buchwald to fly on it. Buchwald replied in a letter: “… thanks for all the free mileage you are handing out. As I understand, if you say the word ‘Trump’ in a gathering of over twenty people, you get forty-three miles of credit on your OnePass account.”

So what would Buchwald have made of Trump the president? Hill reckons: “He would have had the time of his life and maybe he might have been a little bit sharper with him.

“Buchwald would have fared pretty damn well in the social media Twitter age because he had a wonderful off-the-top-of-his-head wit. If he were alive today, he could win an all-out Twitter war with anybody. Like any great satirist, he could throw a good punch, he could take a punch and then he could throw a good punch back.”

Buchwald, who had three children, enjoyed playing chess and poker and smoked six to eight cigars a day – his “pacifier” – until quitting in 1988 on doctor’s orders. In the 1990s he finally went public about his long-held “dark secret” in a series of interviews revealing his lifelong struggle with depression.

He even went on tour with two friends, novelist William Styron and broadcaster Mike Wallace, who also battled the condition. They called themselves the “Blues Brothers” as they shared their stories in the hope of providing comfort.

Hill reflects: “He went public because he wanted to try and help other people deal with it. I know he heard from a lot of people who said him going public helped a lot. It was something he battled all of his life but again that’s part of what’s great about Buchwald: from early on he was always beating the odds. He wasn’t afraid of anybody.”

At one point Buchwald was everywhere with a radio show, a slot on the TV current affairs show 60 Minutes, a Broadway play, lectures all over the country and bestselling compilations of his columns. Yet 15 years after his death at the age of 81, as the torch passed to a new generation including Stewart, Stephen Colbert, Trevor Noah and John Oliver, his fame has dwindled faster than expected.

“He’s dropped from the public consciousness and it’s a shame,” Hill laments. “He has, unfortunately, been forgotten. I hope this book will bring him back to life. I hope people in this tough time might get some laughs out of it too.”

Mervyn De Silva, Dayan's Father

 Reproduction

86th birth anniversary of Mervyn De Silva on September 5th

 “…He was the feared outsider - he was almost left to languish in a set-up monopolized by Tarzie Vittachi and Denzil Peiris. To them Mervyn was the dangerous concealed material that should not be allowed to explode. For Mervyn was an intellectual thinking alone - even in intellectualism he was a loner.”

When Mervyn de Silva died a few years ago we lost one of the finest journalists of our times, a brilliant product of Lake House,a puckish satirist, the Art Buchwald of Sri Lanka

He was a unique editor, unobtrusive, hardly getting out of the editor’s room, leaving the rest of the work of producing the newspaper to others who had been assigned to do their particular jobs - he had immense faith and confidence in his men. 

Mervyn was a loner (“I don’t hunt in packs” - his motto); he preferred to drink alone and eat alone - except when he took his wife Lakshmi and little son Dayan to dine out, which was quite often.

If Clarence Fernando’s humour was loudly overt, Mervyn’s was almost mutely covert and subtle. His satirical pieces under the pseudonyms Daedalus and‘The Outsider’ were classics. In the Observer he was the feared outsider - he was almost left to languish in a setup monopolized by Tarzie Vittachi and Denzil Peiris. To them Mervyn was the dangerous concealed material that should not be allowed to explode. For Mervyn was an intellectual thinking alone - even in intellectualism he was a loner.



Cold Storage Syndrome Ends
The cold storage syndrome ended in 1970 when Mrs. Bandaranaike was swept to power with a massive two-thirds majority. Mervyn was appointed Editor, Daily News and Ernest Corea was sent to the Observer. Ernest Corea took his gang of followers with him to the Observer; Mervyn brought Clarence Fernando to the Daily News which was a brilliant coup in newspaperism. For, “Clarry Bua” became Mervyn’s deputy and the man who virtually ran the Daily News show.
When Mervyn took over there was a sigh of relief everywhere in the Daily News. Finally a man with no prejudices and no one-upmanship had come to take over the Daily News. In addition to the editorship Mervyn was made a Director of Lake House. That was a singular achievement.

I remember Mervyn’s first day in office as Editor, CDN. He had just finished his first editorial on his portable. He was pacing about in the editorial; he seemed nervous. He was biting his nails. He had titled his first editorial CREDO, a superb essay in journalism. In it he had categorically written that from that day on Daily News would accord top priority to truth. After the first edition hit the streets, Lake House Chairman Ranjit Wijewardena telephoned the news desk. I was the night reporter. Wijewardena who never interfered in the editorial work as far as the content of the Daily News was concerned wanted a slight change made in the ‘Credo’ editorial - from that day on ‘should be substituted with ‘always’ - insinuating that the Daily News had always believed in the truth and followed it. I had a rather delicate job on my hands. I had to track down Mervyn at that late hour.

I finally managed to locate him at the Capri. Mervyn had no reservations. He told me to do the correction which I did. Neither Wijewardena nor Mervyn talked about it later.

Mervyn came to office very early in the morning driven to work by wife Lakshmi. In the editor’s room Dennis Vandebona, Mervyn’s steno plus secretary was waiting seated at the typewriter. Mervyn lit a cigarette and began dictating the next day’s editorial. Vandebona was a first rate typist, the best steno I had known at Lake House. Mervyn was fast in his dictation rattling off words common and uncommon, but Vandebona was equal in his speed.

No sooner Mervyn finished off a sentence than Dennis Vandebona had it all on the typewriter sheet. Then the two took a break, Mervyn to attend to some paper work or use the telephone, and Vandebona to sneak out for a smoke. Dennis had the quaint habit of smoking cigarettes in halves - he broke the cigarette in half and smoked. We wondered whether he did it to catch up fast on the typing - no; neither was he being frugal, stingy or thrifty - it was just a habit.

By noon the editorial was done and Mervyn took off to the Taprobane for his beer. Often he was joined by the SLFP political stalwart Hema Dabare who hung around the hotel to work out his clandestine business deals. Mervyn had no dealings with the dealer but only shared a drink with him.
Hema was known among friends as Dr. Dabare and when once he got a real doctor to stand him six straight whisky shots over a deal Mervyn said puckishly “Our own doctor extracted from the real doctor his quota of whisky.” After the noon beer Mervyn lunched somewhere in the Fort alone and returned to office only in the night. By then the Daily News had been put to bed.



A Literary Giant
Mervyn was a literary giant. He knew his art and profession so well that no journalist would challenge him. Yet he did not seek the company of the hybrids. Occasionally he used to come over to me while I was typing and whisper in my ear: “Come to the Press Club for a drink.” I had to obey him, he was my editor but I knew that Clarry would be mad because it was press time. At Simeon’s Press Club which was at the Galle Face Hotel and where the present Indian High Commission is located, we drank beer and talked - Mervyn doing most of the talking.

When I returned to the desk Clarry Bua, I knew, was gritting his teeth, but he did not throw a fit, perhaps because he knew I had gone out with the editor. But on another occasion he went into a rage when Gamini Weerakoon (who later became the Editor of Island), Ranjit Peiris, the irrepressible bundle of mischief, a bomb of a journalist, son of the late illustrious editor Denzil Peiris and I popped in at the Hotel Taprobane during the crucial, ‘press time’ for a binge. Binge it was going to be because our host was Ranjit who had just drawn a mighty festival advance.

 


Mervyn used to contribute to the Daily News articles on foreign  affairs --he was an acknowledged expert on the subject. Fred de Silva  perhaps over intoxicated in his new post ‘killed’ them and did not  publish a single article.Gratitude in its most perverted form! 



Ranjit was perennially broke but thrust few bucks in his palm he would transform into a rich Indian Prince Ranjitsinhji. That was the rich atmosphere at the Tap while the three of us were imbibing double-distilled arrack. Then we were taken unawares. Mervyn walked in with his friend Nimal Karunatilleke, former MP for Matale the first MEP candidate to be announced victorious at the historic ’56 general election. Nimal was also a journalist.

Mervyn is about to order drinks - we were all now seated on bar stools - but Ranjit interrupts and drawls in his high accent (it was not phoney, his was a trained and cultivated voice) “allow us, please Mervyn,” and then orders a double whiskey for Mervyn and arrack for Nimal. The whiskey was expensive but Ranjit was happy to order our editor the drink he loved. The three of us - Ranjit, Gamma and I - were going high and perhaps sensing this Mervyn warned: “Drink but don’t get drunk.” We were drunk anyway as we trooped out of Taprobane after Mervyn left with Nimal.

On the following day there was hell to play: furious at our malingering Clarry Bua sent us curt notes calling explanation on our unauthorized absence from office at peak press time. We sat down to write down our explanations when Mervyn arrived and laughingly asked: “Hey, where did you fellows go after the binge? Did Ranjit bust his entire festival advance?”

Clarry was listening. And after Mervyn left he snatched his notes from us and shredding them to bits, cursed: “How could you run this place when the Editor himself boozes with my reporters!” Bua was not laughing this time around, but we sniggered to ourselves quietly.

Then there was calamity in the Daily News. Fred de Silva, a senior deputy editor was jailed for contempt of court. Mervyn was abroad and Clarence was acting for him. In a miscellaneous column Fred wrote a piece titled ‘Dress Sense’ which was found to be derogatory of the Criminal Justice Commission set up by the then Justice Minister Felix Dias Bandaranaike. Fred de Silva was hauled before the CJC, was found guilty of contempt and sentenced to a month’s hard labour.

Lake House provided him with everything in jail. Fred, a meticulous man and epicurean always ate at Pagoda Hotel in the Fort. So Pagoda provided Fred’s meals in prison. Fred smoked only Ardath cigarettes and when George Mason, Lake House Legal Officer and leader writer of the Daily News sent him a carton of cigarettes of another brand, Fred promptly returned it.

He was provided with a portable and seemingly the stubborn man (he had refused to make a full apology to the CJC) was enjoying his stay behind bars.
Then Mervyn returned and distressed by the incarceration of his friend drove direct from the airport to the residence of Felix Dias Bandaranaike (Felix was Mervyn’s pal) to appeal on behalf of Fred.




Back to Cold Storage
Minister Bandaranaike wanted a specific and genuine expression of contribution from Fred. Mervyn got a document prepared and rushed to Fred in jail and after great persuasion  got Fred to sign the letter of contribution. Fred was released. Then another calamity struck the Daily News. Suddenly Lake House Chairman A. K. Premadasa removed Mervyn from Daily News editorship, made Fred the editor and shoved Mervyn again to cold storage.

Mervyn used to contribute to the Daily News articles on foreign affairs --he was an acknowledged expert on the subject. Fred de Silva perhaps over intoxicated in his new post ‘killed’ them and did not publish a single article.Gratitude in its most perverted form! 

Suddenly Mervyn was sacked but within 24 hours the Times Group, which apparently valued his journalism more than Lake House invited him to be their Editor-in-Chief. Mervyn did work for a while at the Times but the Times was doddering and after a while it collapsed. 



Finest Articles
Mervyn bade good-bye to all newspaper institutions and started his own monthly magazine Lanka Guardian.

It was tough to run an independent magazine with limited resources. The Lanka Guardian carried some of the finest articles in the history of journalism. But commercially it could not sustain itself. Mervyn handed it over to his son, Dayan. Mervyn was a disillusioned man and he died leaving a big void in our field of writing and newspaperism.

(This article by the late Premil Ratnayake originally appeared in the Daily News on Jan 5th 2010 in the series ‘Premil Ratnayaka Reminisces: Lake House Then and Now’.)   

Comparison of Victor Ivan and Milinda Moragoda

I can do this in a few lines but I may expand on this on a future date.

1. Victor was a guy who started as a freedom fighter and ended up as a venture capitalist

I would come to that having disposed Milinda.

He is a guy who bankrupt his grandfather's assets in a decade or so and became a stooge of America and now a stooge of India.

Simply a capitalist becoming a pauper and bum sucking Indians. 

He for a brief period was the Ambassador to India.

I do not think he ever held a cabinet portfolio.

This guy some somehow have grand designs for rulers, just like that teacher guy from down south who used to write speeches for Mahinda. 

Not Dayan Jayathilake but Dullas Alahapperuma

He thought he was a grand strategist and even become a  Prime Minister, one day.

SLFP     Dullas Alahapperuma     Minister of Transport     

28 January 2007     23 April 2010
Minister of Youth Affairs and Skills Development     

23 April 2010     12 January 2015

Milinda Moragoda     Minister of Tourism     28 January 2007     30 May 2009
 

Minister of Justice and Law Reform     30 May 2009     8 April 2010.

This is the project of Ranil with CIA help.

Coming back to this Milinda Guy, he tried to buy the Ravaya, Paper from Victor Ivan to help Mahinda Rajapaksa. Victor was having financial trouble and he had only 30,000 to 35,000 sales for a week which was not enough to pay the staff and the A.T. Ariyaratne's Press, in Kalutara. 

This another teacher guy from Nalanda College who wanted to become the President of Ceylon.

The Sarvodaya Guy. 

I once attended one of his meeting when we went to Budulla for Friendly Hockey Match as a final year medical undergraduate or on a Meditation Session organized by Sarvodya.

I have gone to Baduula only four times, once to see the Duminda  and once again to Diyaluma Falls, all as an undergraduate.

Dunhinda Falls is a waterfall located about 5 kilometers (3.1 mi) from Badulla in the lower central hills of Sri Lanka. The waterfall, which is 64 meters (210 ft) high, gets its name from the smoky dew drops spray, (Dun in Sinhala means mist or smoke) which surrounds the area at the foot of the waterfall.

Diyaluma Falls is located in the Badulla District of Sri Lanka, about 40 km from Ella. 

 It's on the Colombo-Badulla highway, close to Koslanda.

There are over 305 water falls in Ceylon.

One is in Nanu Oya in Nuwara Eliya which I planed  to go but could not.

I have a book on "Water Falls" in Amazon Books.

Well I have done some advertisement for myself and another 5 books are coming soon.

One is on "Linux Essentials" which took a big tall on me especially investigating Arch derivatives of Linux which do not coexist with my Gnome. I just downloaded Endeavour OS which has a lovely KDE Desktop.

I am going to install it instead of Netrunner.

Coming to Victor and Milinda we got a sniff of this activity of Milinda guy and we got activated and raised Rs.500,00/= for Victor and then activated a slanders campaign against the stooge of Mahinda. It was grand success but Victor could not satisfy his editorial staff.

It ended up with Ravaya staff starting Aniddha Paper.

Please support  Aniddha Paper if it is still running.

Do not Supprot this Milinda Guy.

Anything he touches vanishes or become ASH.

I have not said anything about our President but he will be the biggest failure of modern  times including the Decline of J.V.P ideology

I predicted he would get only 45% but he got only 44% and 56% of the electorate does not like him and I do think it is below 33% now. 

Yes, he is a "Flash in the Pan".

That is the reason for Modi coming to Ceylon and getting what he wants.

Modi is a crafty Indian Guy.

"Never trust an Indian" was the advice I got from an Indian doctor who visited Sheffield University in the 1980s.

His name was Dr. Metta (an adaptation of Metta in Pali).

"Metta to All" these guys and I have no animosity but stating the political facts behind them.