How to sum up the world of the royal family this weekend? Easy. Everyone has lost their freaking minds.
As the trailer for their six-part Netflix documentary Harry & Meghan heralded this week, the war between Prince Harry, Meghan Markle and Buckingham Palace has roared back into crazy life.
The palace—presumably realizing that Prince William and Kate Middleton's trip to Boston was derailed first by the Lady Susan Hussey racism controversy and then by the trailer release—is already set on a much more aggressive stance than its defensive crouch after the couple's 2021 Oprah interview. , and the explosive accusation an unnamed senior member of the royal family questioned the skin color of Harry and Meghan's then-unborn child—and did not support Meghan as she contemplated suicide.
Prince William and Kate Middleton have reportedly indicated they will fight back against what they see as any unfounded claims Harry and Meghan make—with their team getting ready to watch the first episodes of the series when they are released on what may be Thursday of this week. . A source tells the Sunday Express: "The Prince and Princesses' team will wait to see what's in the Netflix series before deciding what to do, but you can see the direction of travel." For William, Harry and Meghan's sabotaging of his and Kate's U.S. The trip was seen as a “declaration of war.”
On Tuesday—almost a week after one of the longest serving palace aides, Lady Hussey repeatedly asked Black British charity boss Ngozi Fulani where she was from—Harry and Meghan themselves will receive the Robert F. Kennedy Ripple of Hope award at a gala in New York. City for confronting "structural racism" in the royal family. Hussey resigned, and William condemned her behavior, but what that behavior appears to symbolize gives extra weight to Harry and Meghan's own claims of the prejudice they claim Meghan faced within the household.
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