Talking of those two, both were at a Christmas lunch hosted by the Queen Consort last week.
Clarkson has been criticised widely, but not a word of support for the Duchess from the palace.
I agree Margaret Thatcher got abuse, which was wrong, but it was for her actions rather than because she was a woman. There is a difference.
I don't recall anyone wanting to humiliate her by wishing her to be paraded naked through the streets, with excrement being thrown at her.
That isn't...
For those who think the Duchess forced Harry out of the family to California should watch this. There were credible death threats.
https://www.channel4.com/news/exclusive-meghan-markle-faced-credible-threats-to-her-life-says-former-head-of-counter-terrorism
Perfect examples this morning. Perfect is the wrong word but used metaphorically.
Jeremy Clarkson
Just to add that the Queen Consort invited several people to a private lunch with her including Piers Morgan and Jeremy Clarkson. Make of that, what you will.
There is a huge difference between reverence and politeness. I would take great exception to being just (my maiden name) rather than my first name and married name. It is plain rude.
Have you ever referred to the Princess of Wales as plain Middleton? Middleton opened the new hospital wing?
The Duchess of Sussex is a married woman so if you want to be so rude as to talk about her by her surname then call her Windsor.
He isn't getting any money from the Royal Family, so he is entitled to earn money.
If people ignored them, there wouldn't be half the publicity. The newspapers stir up most of the rubbish because it sells papers. They treat them like soap operas.
Example How dare she wear a white dress to...
https://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2016/may/08/prince-harry-media-intrusion-is-incessant-and-unnecessary
The exact words which don’t mean he requested privacy.
In responding to what Andrew Marr acknowledged was “a cheeky question” during his TV programme, the prince spoke of...
James O'Brien saying pretty much the same thing. He should know, as he used to work on the Daily Express. Here he says, mention Diana on the front page, and it sold 20K more copies.
Btw when did they say they wanted privacy? Did people read it in the papers?