Tuesday, March 9, 2021

Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- March 9, 2021

Britain's Prince Harry and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, are interviewed by Oprah Winfrey in this undated handout photo. Harpo Productions/Joe Pugliese/Handout via REUTERS 


LONDON (Reuters) - Prince Harry and Meghan’s TV interview in which they talked of racism, neglect and feuding inside the royal family is the biggest challenge to the British monarchy this century, but supporters say it will survive, at least while Elizabeth is queen. 

Meghan and Harry’s accusations underscore just how hard the taxpayer-funded institution, which traces its roots through 1,000 years of British and English history, has found it to adapt to a meritocratic world and intense media scrutiny. 


 Commentaries, Analysis, And Editorials -- March 9, 2021 








Myanmar's Month-Long 'Phony War' Is Over -- Bill Hayton, Chatham House 




The inside story on Trump's confrontation with Beijing -- Bethany Allen-Ebrahimian, Axios 


3 comments:

RussInSoCal said...

Oh, the trials, tribulations, hardships of the perpetually aggrieved, super-rich royals.


GTFO,

R,

Anonymous said...


The CDC Has COVID-19 Checkpoints for Air Travel. Illegal Border-Jumpers, Not So Much.

Anonymous said...

Prince Harry is a ginger. Meghan is 1/2 white, if not just a little bit more. The kids will might pass for Polish, German French, Spanish, Italian, Greek or maybe even Irish or British by any passerby on the street. There are more than a few pure German immigrant stock, who look 1/2 as dark or nearly as dark as Meghan. It makes you wonder about the migration period. Story I heard was that Prince Andrew was the stick in the mud and his opinion does not count.

At any rate the British royals should consider that women, who were 1/8th black were considered the most beautiful women in the world in antebellum NO.