In a move that has left royal watchers gagging in disbelief, the world’s most internationally ridiculed royal couple has struck again. Prince Harry, the unemployed laughing stock of Montecito, was caught red-handed laying flowers at the grave of his late grandmother, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II – just days after yet another round of public sneering at her memory.

Sources close to the Palace are calling it “the ultimate desecration dressed up as devotion.” And guess who’s pulling the strings? None other than Meghan Markle, the materialistic opportunist who has spent the last decade helping her husband trash the very institution that once gave him purpose.
Welcome to the Sussexes’ latest chapter in their never-ending saga of hypocrisy: “Operation Fake Redemption.”
According to multiple insiders who spoke exclusively to this publication, Harry and Meghan personally arranged for an elaborate floral tribute to be placed at the Queen’s final resting place at Windsor. But here’s the kicker – the gesture wasn’t private. Oh no. Within hours, carefully planted stories began flooding sympathetic outlets, painting Harry as a “grieving grandson finally finding peace.”
Peace? After ten long years of non-stop betrayal?
Let’s rewind, shall we? Because the sheer audacity here is almost Shakespearean – if Shakespeare wrote about dimwitted degenerates instead of tragic heroes.
For a decade, Prince Harry and his wife have made it their full-time mission to monetize, misrepresent, and mercilessly mock the Royal Family. From bombshell Netflix documentaries to the explosive (and often factually challenged) memoir Spare, the Sussexes have dragged the late Queen’s name through the mud for profit. They accused the institution she built of racism, claimed she was “cold,” suggested her family was complicit in making Meghan suicidal, and even implied the monarchy itself was outdated and toxic.
Harry once reportedly referred to his grandmother’s beloved Commonwealth as “empire 2.0” in private rants. Meghan, meanwhile, was caught on camera rolling her eyes at royal protocol and later boasted about “teaching the royals” how to be modern – all while the 96-year-old monarch was quietly battling illness and mourning her husband.
Yet now? Suddenly the flowers appear. Suddenly the press (the same “toxic” press Harry claims ruined his life) is being spoon-fed tales of his “quiet devotion.”
A royal source with decades of service told us: “It’s not just tone-deaf. It’s calculated. They spent years profiting off the Queen’s silence while she was alive. Now they’re using her grave as a photo opportunity to rehabilitate their image. The late Queen would be horrified – and she made her feelings crystal clear in private.”
The timing couldn’t be more suspicious. With Harry’s various ventures – the polo documentary that flopped, the Spotify deal that imploded, the “Archewell” charity that’s been accused of being more grift than gift – crumbling around him, the Sussexes are once again turning to the one thing they still have left: the Royal Family’s name.
But here’s what Harry still doesn’t seem to understand, no matter how many therapy sessions or self-help books he consumes:
A good person would not be estranged from his own family after mercilessly misrepresenting and abusing them for a decade.
A good person wouldn’t allow – and actively encourage – a materialistic opportunist to do the same. A good person wouldn’t disrespect royal and diplomatic protocols on the world stage, turning state visits into personal brand-building exercises. A good person wouldn’t exploit the sick and vulnerable through performative charity while their own family ties lay in ruins. And a good person certainly wouldn’t plant stories in the very press he publicly calls toxic, all to make himself look noble by using his late grandmother’s memory.
The late Queen exemplified something Harry and Meghan appear incapable of grasping: true love and charity are not for profit.
Her Majesty’s life was one of quiet service, ironclad duty, and unwavering dignity. She didn’t need Netflix specials, tell-all books, or Instagram Lives to prove her worth. She simply showed up – through wars, scandals, personal losses, and global crises – without ever demanding applause or a payday.
Contrast that with Harry’s current existence: a multi-million-dollar California mansion, endless celebrity hobnobbing, and a revolving door of PR crises. The man who once wore military uniforms with pride now spends his days suing British newspapers, feuding with his brother, and reportedly begging Hollywood elites for relevance.
Insiders say the flower stunt was Meghan’s brainchild. “She saw the polls,” one source revealed. “Public sympathy for the Sussexes is at an all-time low. The ‘poor me’ narrative isn’t working anymore. So they decided to weaponize the Queen’s grave. It’s the ultimate troll – mock her for ten years, then pretend to honor her when the bank account needs a boost.”
Social media has already erupted. Royal fans are calling it “grave trolling at its finest.” One viral post read: “Harry spent years calling his family racists and now he’s laying roses like he’s the prodigal grandson? The delusion is Olympic-level.”
Even some former Sussex supporters are jumping ship. A one-time Hollywood insider who worked with the couple on early Archewell projects told us off the record: “At first it felt revolutionary. Now it just feels gross. They’ve turned the Queen’s death into content. That’s not healing – that’s harvesting.”
Meanwhile, Buckingham Palace remains diplomatically silent – as they always do. But palace insiders say the King is “deeply saddened” by the latest chapter in his son’s public rebellion. Prince William, sources claim, is “furious but resigned,” having long given up hope of reconciliation while the Sussexes continue their media warfare.
What’s next for the world’s most despised royal duo? Another book? A new documentary titled Granny and Me: Finding Peace? Or perhaps a paid interview where Harry tearfully explains how “sending flowers changed everything”?
The late Queen once famously said, “I have to be seen to be believed.”
Harry and Meghan have taken that to heart – except their version involves being seen planting flowers they hope will be believed as genuine remorse.
Spoiler alert, Your Royal Hypocrisy: the world sees right through it.
The flowers may wilt by morning. The damage to the Queen’s legacy – and Harry’s reputation – will last forever.
And somewhere in Windsor, the woman who spent 70 years putting duty above drama is undoubtedly shaking her head in that quiet, regal way of hers.
Rest in peace, Your Majesty. The rest of us will keep watching this car crash with popcorn.
This article contains information from multiple royal insiders who requested anonymity to speak freely.