Yes, I see potential there, but I think Harry's job experience would be wasted. Maybe he should launch himself onto the consulting circuit and offer advice on family disputes. His first client would be Boris Johnson.
I mostly regret my regrets. One should live regret-free, if possible. There was a little French women who sang about regrets, but I regret I can't remember her name.
Harry, I personally believe, cannot stop jumping for joy. He feels like he has been let out of prison. Suddenly, he doesn't have this albatross hanging around his neck, and the world lies in the palm of his hand.
Of course we can speak of the regrets of others.....
For instance, I have just written to a beautiful 45 year-old stranger in an exotic foreign country. I told her that she couldn't have me, it was out of the question, and I wasn't going to change my mind.
I think it is a great pity...almost a crime, that there is no way to save the best and the funniest forum chats of the past for posterity. And there have been some great ones.
Save them to a 'Greatest Moments' a sort of nostalgic folder one can go to.
Well, I have no idea of what those two went thru, the pressures and the psychological game of cat and mouse with the press, so I can hardly judge. But it's a mess because they belong to one of the most public families in the world. I wouldn't want that job for anything.
So here's my movie script so far....Harry and Meghan move to small town USA. Because they can't afford to pay for 24/7 security, they both go for extensive plastic surgery. When they get out of rehab, no-one recognises them. Meghan takes a job at the local McDonalds, and Harry opens a second-hand car dealership selling Landrovers. The media loses touch with the story, and no-one hears from them again.
On the passing of one of Britain's eminent conservative philosophers, here Sir Roger Scruton's most well-known argument for conservative values in life and art - the idea that beauty as a value and a constant, is essential to human life.
I agree with you. We are what we read. Noam Chomsky, Chris Hedges and Robert Reich seem to believe that corporations thru their Super Pacs own and dictate to the US goverment. That may or not be true, but as leading luminaries on America, you may be more swayed by their arguments than mine.
Regrets
Yes! I think her name was Marcie Duchamp?