Rajini vaidyanathan biography of donald

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  • Why I came 'home' to India

    Every time I visited I wrote a diary. It was a kind of ode to the land I never really knew, but the place my parents called "home".

    "Really modern, like London," I wrote, "Millions of shops, hotels, restaurants, markets and skyscrapers.

    "It's not rare to see a cattle standing in the road and occasionally its droppings.

    "People portray India full of villages, there are, but cities too," I continued, with my pre-pubescent observations.

    When I returned and gave a class presentation on the trip, I remember excitedly explaining what I had done, and how much I loved it.

    "My dad went to India and said he wouldn't even get off the plane it smelt so much," said one girl in the class, unaware perhaps, of the dagger she had landed in my stomach.

    I went home and cried to my mum about it. I couldn't understand why people would have such a negative perception of such a beautiful country.

    US election: Racist trolling for reporting on Trump

    I carried on with my job, sharing photos and film of the speakers and supporters.

    But the talk show host, and others continued to bait me online, accusing me of lying, which of course inom was not.

    Earlier in the night, my colleague had posted a film, also pointing out that 40 minutes from the start of the rally, the arena was "far from full", yet he was not subjected to the same vitriol.

    "Propaganda whore." "Bitch." The insults kept flying.

    It felt like a virtual mob was hurling toward me. The language was rude, some of it was sexist, and in one case racist.

    "Go back to India," wrote a user who had Nazi imagery on his timeline. "Leave this country now," he continued, as he described me as "disgusting and degenerate".

    That konto has now been suspended.

    A female Trump supporter contacted me online to säga how horrified she was by the white supremacist insults. Sh

    BBC viewers left in stitches after presenter's 'Donald Tramp' news-reading blunder

    BBC viewers were left in stitches after a newsreader slip-up resulted in an unfortunate slur against former president Donald Trump.

    Rajini Vaidyanathan was forced to correct herself after the blunder on Thursday morning’s programme.


    In a report about US Senator Mitch McConnell and his recent health fears, Vaidyanathan decided to draw comparisons between his age and that of president Biden and former president Trump.

    She said: “Now there are health concerns about the top Republican Senator Mitch McConnell.

    Rajini Vaidyanathan made the blunder on Thursday morning

    BBC

    “He froze while answering a reporter's question during a press conference in Kentucky.”

    Rajini explained: “Now for background, Mr McConnell is 81 and has served as a Senator in Washington for 39 years.

    “The average age of the US Senator is

    “By way of comparison, President Joe Biden is 80 years old an

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