Prince Harry just got a £1.5 million wake-up call today. A judge rightly threw out his demand for automatic, taxpayer-funded police protection when visiting Britain. Most taxpayers would agree with the decision. After all, you don’t get royal security when you’ve quit the job.
This was always going to happen. Harry walked away from the Firm, trashed the institution on global television, signed Hollywood deals—and bizarrely still expected the British public to cover his bodyguards. He attacked his brother, his father the king and the King’s wife Queen Camilla too.
It was entitlement masquerading as victimhood.
The court wasn’t buying it.
The ruling was blunt: security is based on duty and risk, not bloodline.
Harry may have been born into royalty, the second son of the king - but he’s no longer working for it.
That was his decision. With it came consequences.
His reaction? Pure anger.
In an interview with the BBC, he called it a “stitch-up,” blamed the Royal Household, and said he was “devastated.”
He claimed every UK visit still has to go through palace channels—something he says isn’t his choice.
Apparently, the people he says cut him off are still holding the keys.
And yet, he insists he never asked his father to intervene.
Just to “step out of the way.”
He wants peace, he says. But he’s still lobbing grenades - books, interviews, documentaries - have had a consistent anti-royal theme.
Let’s be clear: his safety concerns aren’t foolish.
He’s a global figure, a veteran, a target. But public money doesn’t fund private grievances.
If he wants protection, he can pay for it.
This was never only about danger. It was about status. His status.
Harry wants the privileges of royalty without the responsibility.
The court reminded him: it doesn’t work like that.
No royal duties? No royal police detail.
But Harry isn’t going quietly. In an astonishing, scathing interview with the BBC, he took fresh aim at his father—King Charles—saying the monarch “won’t speak to him” over the row, even as Harry claims to want “reconciliation.”
Why? Because HE has “forgiven them.” Forgiveness, it seems, is something Harry extends freely—right after another round of blame.