Thursday, 19 February 2026

WILLIAM COMES UNDER FIRE FOR HIS TONE DEAF INTERVIEW FOCUSSING ON HIMSELF WHILE IGNORING ANDREWS CRIMES AS SPECULATION OVER THE END OF THE MONARCHY GROWS

POLICE SHOULD PUT WILLIAM ON THEIR LIST AFTER HIS EVASIVE,  SEMI PYSCHOPATHIC BBC INTERVIEW

DISPLAYED SAME DISTURBING TRAITS AS ANDREW DURING HIS CAR CRASH NEWSNIGHT INTERVIEW


I have argued  William is cut from the same arrogant and deceitful cloth as Andrew and is deeply involved in all the Windsors crimes, also the covid jab scheme.

I think William made the point himself better than I could ever have hoped that he is a dim witted, throw back to the colonial era, a eugenicist, misoygnist, racist and unfit to be King by his singularly evasive and egomaniacal interview on the BBC yesterday.

Shelagh Fogarty asks why his team did not stop him from exposing him as "at best clumsY" and at worst as "heartless" and "out of touch" when he gave a BBC Radio 1 interview which was one long whine.

Who puts a check on this egomanac living like a feudal lord at the expense of the British people while feeling utter contempt for them and their right to information about what he knew about Andrew s crimes?

Shelagh Fogary rightly said people expect William to be talking about what he knew, when and to the police.

To call  his interview a contribution to understand mental health issues is to give William more credit than he deserves.

"Being a bloke it's really difficult to sit with your feelings. You ask a man how he feels and he tells you what he thinks," he says.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/lifestyle-buzz/prince-william-aggressive-to-staff-and-insists-on-just-one-title/ar-AA1Kb7JO?ocid=iehp

Indeed, it may be more than a stereotype to say that men are generally more rational and women generally more emotional.

But can  Williams semi incoherent, self indulgent, sub standard waffle about how much of a burden helping others during his time in the air ambulance  was to him and how he, asically, does not like to listen even to his children, be called "thinking"?  Is this what we expect of a reflective, reasonable, thinking man?  

At the same time, there is little sign of the depth of feeling, empathy and care for others, which we expect of a normal, motherly type woman?.

His loquacious monologue about himself comes across as a  strangely empty PR  job designed to portray William as some kind of victim when all of the UK is talking about the real world, sex trafficking victims of Andrew and the cover up of Charles and William and expecting him to comment on it.

The News Agents podcasts asks why the BBC did not ask a single question about Andrew and the biggest scandal engulfing the monarchy ever.

Like Andrew in his car crash Newsnight interview, William seems to project onto the British public a level of idiocy which is genuinely baffling.

Who does he have in his team?

Why does Kate not offer William any intelligent feedback? Is she unable or unwilling to criticize him? 

Who puts a check on this egomanac living like a feudal lord at the expense of the British people while feeling utter contempt for them and their right to information about what he knew about Andrew s crimes?

The police need to put a check on these Epstein linked mafia ruling the UK using a corrupt network.

The police should interview William as well as Charles, put the entire Windsor crime gang behind bars.

From media

Shelagh Fogarty reacts to Prince William's interview where he told the BBC "we need more male role models" to talk about their mental health publicly in order to help other men do the same.


The comments come as the police are investigating claims that Epstein trafficked women through UK airports. 


Shelagh Fogarty asks whether you think it’s appropriate for the future king to focus on his mental health issues, given the current scrutiny of Prince Andrew’s association with Jeffrey Epstein.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVdizECQ_4w


From media 

The Prince of Wales has been on BBC Radio 1’s Life Hacks discussing his mental health. Shelagh Fogarty says that in normal circumstances, she would welcome it. He spoke about learning to understand your emotions, about checking in with yourself, about recognising that even a serious mental health crisis can pass. There is nothing objectionable in that message, argues Shleagh - but these are not normal circumstances.


'The royal family remains embroiled in the fallout from Jeffrey Epstein’s crimes and the conduct and associations of the Duke of York. Questions persist about what Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor did, who he saw, and what senior members of the royal household knew about it. Those questions have not been answered in any comprehensive way. They hang over the institution.'

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N29Ta7NjHg4



Why didn’t the BBC ask Prince William about Andrew? | The News Agents

Prince William gave an interview to BBC Radio 1 to talk about men’s mental health and the importance of speaking out. It’s a vital topic - and it affects millions of people.


What was noticeable, however, was that in the course of the hour long discussion there was not a single mention of the man at the centre of our national discourse - and of his own family - Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.


Is it still sustainable to protect the royals from awkward questions? Or does something need to change in the dialogue between press and monarchy? Is it all over if we treat them like politicians, door stepping them on the issue of the day?


The BBC told us that the programme was "a panel discussion - not an interview", and that "as is standard, the BBC has editorial control" over the programme.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYK9aP_yS2w


William also recalled a time where he noticed his mental health was 'deteriorating' after working as a pilot for the air ambulance service between March 2015 and July 2017, and the importance of taking 'stock' of how you are feeling.


'If you listen to the body and have time to process your thoughts and your feelings, it will present itself to you,' he said. 'It's really important you have those moments where you take stock.


'The biggest example for me was when I was doing work with the air ambulance and I was a pilot flying with them.


'We had busy jobs and you had people in sadly very difficult situations that you were having to help them with.


'Over time I noticed my mental health really deteriorating and I hadn't really clocked onto it because, in that community, you try and make light of some of the moments just to keep sane and keep going.


'It wasn't until I stepped away from it on a sort of longer break that I looked at myself and went, 'My god, I'm carrying everyone's emotional baggage'. It was really weighing me down.'


The Prince of Wales continued to explain how the nature of emergency service jobs can take its toll on people due to how emotionally and physically demanding the work can be.

He said: 'It's not until you step away from it, either that you retire or you have a break, which many of them don't get long enough breaks, are you able to process what kind of attritional, mental, emotional experiences you're having each time.


'You can't have time to deal with that. It's coming at you so fast and if you're carrying a bit of emotional baggage from each scene, from someone else's experience, it just weighs you down.


'So for me coming away from the situation is really important for us to be able to take stock of just what we've been through and what our brain is processing.'


He later added: 'I'm quite emotionally available, I like that about who I am, and I find some of the places I go to, people I meet, are having a really tricky time.


'That helps me put my own life into perspective but also I carry with me their burden sometimes and that's the bit I find very difficult is I feel other people's pain and that overwhelms me sometimes and I have to deal with that because I just care when I meet people who are in trouble or having a bad day and you want to help.


'You want to fix it but you can't necessarily fix some of the stuff and emotionally I find that very challenging.'


Speaking later about the panel discussion, James said he hopes the conversation will enlighten and comfort people and help get the conversation going.


Meanwhile, during the radio show the prince said  mental health organisations could prove to be 'a little stepping stone' in helping those struggling to get through the more challenging moments.


'And if we talk about that more, and educate people more, then hopefully the idea of suicide keeps being pushed further and further away,' he added.


'Because you know that tomorrow, you might wake up and you might feel very different.'

When asked if his children shared their feelings with him, William joked: ‘Sometimes too much. I get all the details. Which I love, it’s amazing.


‘Being able to understand it, have time for it, decipher it, sometimes you feel the sense that you need to fix it for everyone and that I find quite difficult.


‘I have to remind myself that you don’t have to fix everything but you do have to listen. And it's important to be ok with those feelings and those comments.’


Professor Green, also known as Stephen Manderson, also featured on the show, having long campaigned on issues relating to mental health himself. 


The rapper, 42, previously featured in a documentary, Suicide and Me in 2015, about the loss of his own father to suicide and has worked with Prince William on his Heads Together campaign. 


He revealed that he is stopped in the street by the 'blokiest of blokes' who tell him his advocacy has saved their lives.


'Being a bloke it's really difficult to sit with your feelings,' he said, 'You ask a man how he feels and he tells you what he thinks.'

https://www.msn.com/en-us/lifestyle/lifestyle-buzz/prince-william-aggressive-to-staff-and-insists-on-just-one-title/ar-AA1Kb7JO?ocid=iehp



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