Meghan Markle savaged as expert fumes Duchess of Sussex 'is not a feminist'


Meghan Markle was slammed by a royal author who claimed she is “not a feminist” and has earned most of her money through bashing the Royal Family.

Angela Levin told GB News America’s Nana Akua that the Duchess of Sussex “wants to be the equivalent of a queen” and “rule everything” but she lacks compassion.

She said: “I think she sort of doesn’t realise what sort of human being she is. She’s not kind but she’s also not a feminist.

“She claims to be one, but actually she married someone with loads of millions and is seeing her fortune that way.

“Most of the money they’ve earned is by being thoroughly nasty about Harry’s Royal Family.

“She is not someone who has made herself, this is someone who is clutching onto something that is not hers and turn it into vast amounts of money.”

Meghan Markle has been championship feminism and gender equality way before she met Prince Harry.

She’s worked with the United Nations and World Vision as a vocal advocate for women and girls.

In 2015, Meghan attended the UN Women’s Conference on International Women’s Day.

During her speech, she commented on gender inequality: “Come on. This has to change. Women make up more than half of the world’s population and potential, so it is neither just nor practical for their voices, for our voices, to go unheard at the highest levels of decision-making.”

And in 2017, she wrote in Time magazine about the stigma surrounding menstruation after a trip to India.

She said: “The stigma surrounding menstruation and lack of access to proper sanitation directly inhibit(s) young women from pursuing an education.”

Two years later, and one year after she married the Duke of Sussex, Meghan spoke about gender equality again stressing that it “can’t happen without men”.

During a roundtable conversation with youth ambassadors from One Young World at Windsor Castle, she said: “What you’re all capable of doing independently is incredible but then when you work collectively, our intention today is to try to create somewhat of a task force to see what we can do within our communities and then use that knowledge to apply it to whatever is happening in all these other communities.

“In terms of gender equality, which is something I have championed for a long time, I think that conversation can’t happen without men being a part of it.”

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