Politics

Harry and Meghan Learn The Hard Way That Comedy Is Still Legal In America

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Nothing encapsulates how fragile Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are more than their deranged response to the latest “South Park” episode “The Worldwide Privacy Tour.” In the episode, the cartoon couple based on the duo embarks on a worldwide “we want privacy” tour, which they ironically launch on the “Good Morning America” spoof “Good Morning Canada.”

The episode is some much-need cultural comic relief in the wake of Harry and Meghan’s real-life “worldwide privacy tour” for Harry’s autobiography “Spare,” which “South Park” aptly renamed “Waaagh,” and the couple’s new Netflix series in which they demonize their families for six hours straight. 

Unlike the rest of the world, Harry and Meghan haven’t found the episode very funny, and the couple was reportedly looking into suing “South Park” (although now they are denying it). Royal sources dished that Meghan is “upset and overwhelmed” by the episode and “annoyed by ‘South Park’ but refuses to watch it all,” which seems highly unlikely if she was gearing up to sue. 

Harry and Meghan’s unhinged reaction to being made fun of isn’t surprising. The couple has a history of retaliating against anyone critical of them. They’ve already sued the Daily Mail, and Meghan helped personally orchestrate the termination of Piers Morgan from “Good Morning Britain.”

Harry and Meghan supposedly fled Britain’s bigoted media to seek refuge in America — a country whose founding principles include freedom of the press. It’s unclear why exactly Harry and Meghan thought the American media would be softer than the British press. What we

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