Their lack of self-awareness holds strong
By Joanna Williams
Here’s my truth. Harry, you were born into privilege most of us can barely imagine
By Joanna Williams
One of the worst consequences of this obsession with political correctness is that nothing can simply be fun anymore
By Joanna Williams
Harry unwittingly exposes the zeitgeist and helps us clarify what’s troubling about the times we live in
By Joanna Williams
Our response to Floyd’s death, here in the UK, has been driven by far more than compassion, interest, and anger
By Joanna Williams
The Sussexes seem to find it hard to know where real life stops and fantasy begins
By Joanna Williams
If you must share every intimate moment, don’t complain when the public expects to know more
By Joanna Williams
Laughing at Harry means we avoid having to take him seriously and subjecting his words to serious criticism
By Joanna Williams
In reality, COVID-19 shows us nothing other than that a very nasty virus can be fatal to old and sick people
By Joanna Williams
If you want to head-up a television production company then what you really need is to be born — or marry — into vast wealth
By Joanna Williams
The more hard done the Duke and Duchess appear, the more sympathy they garner from friends and allies
By Joanna Williams
The antics of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex have never seemed more utterly irrelevant
By Joanna Williams
They want to drop boring duties and avoid pesky royal correspondents, but keep access to Charles’s wallet, inherited wealth and the status of royalty
By Joanna Williams
The media should be free to comment on what is, at best, a privileged lack of self-awareness and at worst barefaced hypocrisy
By Joanna Williams