For Meghan Markle, being completely separated from the Royal Family meant she had to quickly begin trying to sell her life story to the highest bidder.
She needs to provide for the family but she is sadly going about it all wrong. For some reason, her PR team has filled her head with ideas that she is some sort of hero who is starting to have dellusions of grandeur.
Just last Tuesday, Mariah Carey herself called out Meghan Markle’s dive-like behavior. She’s attempted to keep selling the story of racism against her when the British tabloids have treated her exactly as they treat other outsiders to the crown. Even more worrying is her alleged plan to someday run for Congress in the United States, she truly believes she can get a position as a politician with so many flawed views of the world we get from her.
The Meghan Markle ‘Cut’ interview. I can’t work out if the writer is taking the piss out of her or not. These are the most hilarious bits. She’s soooo pompous. pic.twitter.com/8J4goPVee8
— Ginger Jones (@DDenouncement) August 29, 2022
Meghan’s most recent slip-up was an interview with The Cut, where she allegedly tells the story of a trip to South Africa and how people from that country view her wedding to Prince Harry. When she visited South Africa for the live action ‘The Lion King‘, Meghan recalls one of the film’s cast members who was born there told her.
This is what she said: “I just had Archie. It was such a cruel chapter. I was scared to go out. He looked at me, and he’s just like light. He said, ‘I just need you to know: When you married into this family, we rejoiced in the streets the same we did when Mandela was freed from prison.'”
Meghan Markle covers The Cut: https://t.co/dlEouOMVNh pic.twitter.com/XPETY8koOi
— Fashionista.com (@Fashionista_com) August 29, 2022
Mandela’s grandson is not having it
That’s right, Meghan just compared her wedding to one of the most significant anti-apartheid events in modern history. Nelson Mandela’s grandson, Zwelivelile ‘Mandla’ Mandela was having none of it as he told MailOnline the following remarks: “It can never be compared to the celebration of someone’s wedding. Madiba’s celebration was based on overcoming 350 years of colonialism with 60 years of a brutal apartheid regime in South Africa.
“So It cannot be equated to as the same. Every day there are people who want to be Nelson Mandela, either comparing themselves with him or wanting to emulate him. But before people can regard themselves as Nelson Mandelas, they should be looking into the work that he did and be able to be champions and advocates of the work that he himself championed.”