DAILY MAIL COMMENT: This assault on Camilla shames Prince Harry

DAILY MAIL COMMENT: This assault on Camilla shames Prince Harry

Of all the spiteful attacks Prince Harry has launched against his family, perhaps the most unkind and undeserved was on his stepmother, the Queen Consort.

Painting Camilla as one of the main villains in his narcissistic tale of woe when he knows she can’t publicly defend herself is an example of the very bullying he himself complains about.

It is also deeply unfair. From being vilified in the years after Princess Diana’s death, all the polls show Camilla has earned a special place in the nation’s affections.

With her easy charm, formidable work ethic and unstuffy approach to royal life, she is one of the best advertisements for the modern Royal Family.

All the polls show Camilla has earned a special place in the nation’s affections

And her beneficial effect on husband Charles has been palpable. Not always the most patient or diplomatic in his earlier life, her influence has helped him become a softer, more engaging person.

The idea that she briefed against Harry to shore up her own popularity is surely for the birds. Like so many of Harry’s broadsides, he produces no evidence to back it up. Some would call it slander.

Meanwhile, the prince and his wife continue to cling on to their royal titles. When asked why they didn’t renounce them, Harry said: ‘What difference would that make?’

The difference is that they would finally be free from the institution they obviously despise and the family members they believe have betrayed them.

In truth, the couple want to have their cake and eat it – retaining the trappings of royalty for themselves and their children while at the same time trashing the monarchy.

It may be hypocritical but it has proved a hugely lucrative combination so far.

Why would they ditch a money-spinning formula? After all, they have to fund their super-rich Californian lifestyle somehow.

What a shower!

Six of the ten wettest years in UK history have occurred since 1998. October 2020 was the wettest month on record for many parts of England. This year, though still in its infancy, is already proving to be uncommonly soggy.

So why on earth are we being warned to brace ourselves for another summer of drought and hosepipe bans? We can put a man on the moon, yet apparently don’t have the gumption to respond to warmer weather by improving our water storage capacity. It simply beggars belief.

Water companies, many foreign owned, have made a fat living from catching and selling a natural resource which drops out of the sky.

It’s time they ploughed more of their profits into securing the water supply for when the weather is drier. A good place to start would be fixing the leaks through which nearly three billion litres are lost every day and creating more reservoirs.

Why must customers be punished for water firms’ negligence?

UK’s Christmas boom

To paraphrase Mark Twain, reports on the death of the British economy appear to have been greatly exaggerated.

Despite doom-laden predictions, high streets enjoyed a bumper Christmas, with sales rising 6.9 per cent.

Clearly, after two festive seasons ruined by Covid, families weren’t going to let such trifles as rail strikes and freezing weather affect their celebrations.

In further positive news, Rolls-Royce sold a record 6,000 cars last year, enabling the firm to reward workers with a 10 per cent pay rise, plus a one-off productivity payment of £2,000.

It goes to show that even in a downturn, businesses that provide people with the goods and services they want will always succeed. And it proves that while the naysayers are desperate to hammer its coffin shut, there is still plenty of life left in the economy yet.

Source: Read Full Article