Meghan and Harry's new book only confirms they're the world's most tone-deaf, hypocritical, narcissistic, deluded, whiny brats - AND that most of the stories the 'lying' press wrote about them were 100 percent true!
By Piers Morgan
Daily Mail
July 27, 2020
'Where’s the positivity,’ moans Prince Harry,' why is everyone so miserable and angry?’
I
 regret to say I laughed out loud when I read that line from the new 
book “Finding Freedom” which claims to be the REAL story about why Harry
 and his wife Meghan quit the Royals and Britain.
It’s hard to think of anyone in public life right now more relentlessly miserable, angry and negative than the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.
Barely a week goes by without them whining about something or suing people.
They’ve become serial victims, intent on painting themselves as the most hard-done-by people on God’s earth.
Yet
 the more they complain, as the rest of the world struggles with the 
very real hell of the worst pandemic for 100 years, the more they expose
 themselves as a pair of appallingly bitter, staggeringly self-obsessed,
 utterly deluded, and woefully tone-deaf laughing stocks.
The title of the book alone has made me shake my head ever since it was announced.
It
 is obviously derived from Nelson Mandela’s autobiography ‘Long Walk To 
Freedom’ which is one of the most powerful books ever written about 
regaining liberty.
But any comparison between Mandela and the Sussexes is frankly a sick joke.
For
 18 of his 27 years behind bars, South Africa’s most iconic leader was 
housed in an 8ft-by-7ft concrete cell on Robben Island with only a straw
 mat to sleep on. He had an iron bucket for a toilet, thin blankets for 
his bed, and allowed one visitor a year. He couldn’t even attend the 
funerals of his mother and son.
Every day, Mandela would work in a lime quarry, breaking stones as armed guards watched over him.
So, the freedom he experienced when he finally got out of prison was a very real and visceral one.
Harry and Meghan’s experience in captivity has been slightly less oppressive.
After
 a sumptuous wedding that was rapturously received around the world, 
they lived in a palatial taxpayer-funded royal home, were waited on by 
teams of servants, flew around in private jets, and attended glitzy 
movie premieres where they were cheered by screaming fans.
But it wasn’t enough.
Stung
 by a series of perceived slights by other members of the royal family 
and palace courtiers, and repeated media criticism of hypocrisy based on
 their undeniably hypocritical behavior, they began to see this gilded 
life of unimaginable luxury and privilege as a ‘prison’.
In
 their eyes, they had become Nelson Mandela, the victims of a terrible 
miscarriage of justice now trapped in a world of unending misery.
So,
 they broke ‘free’, dramatically announcing in early January that they 
were quitting the royals, and Britain, and heading off for a new life in
 America where they could be the people they wanted to be and lead the 
lives they wanted to lead.
There was just one problem.
Unlike
 Mandela, who emerged from his very real prison with extraordinary 
positivity, an astonishing lack of bitterness, and an intense desire to 
unify not divide, the Sussexes seem even more unhappy now than they were
 before and intent on causing as much division as possible.
This
 new book, clearly written with their approval and with enough private 
details to establish that a lot of it came directly from the horses’ 
mouths, was supposed to ‘set the record straight’.
We would all apparently read it, understand how badly treated they were, and sympathize enormously.
In fact, the opposite has happened.
The extracts published in various newspapers have only shown us just how pathetically self-pitying Harry and Meghan have become.
This was a couple who had it all - but threw it away in a massive fit of ego-driven pique.
The
 sheer scale of their narcissism is astonishing, and at the heart of it 
lies one stunning fact: they genuinely couldn’t understand why William 
and Kate, the future King and Queen, got preferential treatment to them.
Time after time in the book, this seething resentment re-emerges and it explains everything.
For
 a couple so low down the Throne Succession cab rank, the Sussexes have 
delusions of grandeur and importance on a breath-taking scale.
They also have no sense of self-awareness.
In the book, Harry and Meghan, always so 
angry at media intrusion into their family’s life, have stuck the knife 
into his family in spectacular fashion.
Harry
 whacks his brother Prince William for being a snob and his father 
Prince Charles for being thoughtless, while Meghan whacks her 
sister-in-law Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, for being cold and 
insensitive towards her.
They 
repeatedly accuse the whole Royal family, presumably including the 
Queen, of ignoring their desperate plight, despite, as they laughably 
claim, them single-handedly leading the royals to supposedly 
unprecedented heights of global popularity.
The
 fact this garbage is being spewed after the Queen, Charles, William and
 Kate have spent months comforting the British people in remarkably 
empathetic and impressive fashion during the crisis, is even more 
grating.
The deeply intrusive revelations go on, page after page.
Of
 course, the comical irony of the approved publication of all this 
‘setting the record straight’ private information is that most of it 
confirms myriad newspaper stories that we were previously assured were 
‘media lies’.
There are other little snippets in the book that blast off the page like bombs.
Meghan,
 we’re told, used to tip off the paparazzi about her movements in 
Toronto where she filmed her TV show Suits. One of them even had her 
phone number.
Oh, and she would leak stories to the press to promote herself.
When
 I read this, I thought immediately of the way she has so heartlessly 
disowned her father Thomas for naively colluding with the paparazzi to 
promote himself in the run-up to her wedding.
And for her furiously worded lawsuit against unknown paparazzi last week for their alleged intrusion into their Hollywood life.
It’s clearly one rule for Meghan when it comes to such media-appeasing behavior, another for even her dad.
As with so much that surrounds the Duchess’s conduct, the hypocrisy is stunning.
But what’s even more repellent is her totally delusional victimhood.
‘I gave up my entire life for this family,’ whines Meghan in the book.
No
 luv, you gave up precisely three years for this family, then stole away
 Britain’s favorite Prince to Hollywood where you’re now complaining 
even more than you were before.
As for 
‘hostage’ Harry, he’s becoming a tragic figure. It’s getting to the 
stage where his former army mates may want to fly over to Los Angeles to
 carry out an extraction operation and save him from himself.
If this book is supposed to be the pro Meghan and Harry one, I’d hate to see a hatchet job.
They come out of it as the world’s most 
self-centered couple, bleating away about their ghastly lives living in 
TV star Tyler Perry’s $20 million Hollywood mansion, and seemingly 
oblivious to the fact that hundreds of thousands of people have died 
from the coronavirus and tens of millions more have lost their jobs.
The struggle for much of the planet right now is very, very real.
Just as it was for Nelson Mandela for 27 years.
Meghan
 and Harry’s only struggle is to work out each day which of their latest
 borrowed lavish home’s twelve bathrooms they want to luxuriate in 
before they bravely appear on those creepy videos to lecture us all 
about equality and hardship.
I think 
what most of us would like now is to find freedom from this ridiculous 
pair’s incessantly negative, miserably, angry whining.
 
 
1 comment:
Meghan picked the dumb Prince and still got what she wanted. The Royals never allow Harry to suffer regardless of he married.
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