by on November 24, 2025
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Harry told an audience that 'far too many young people are locked out of leadership pipelines because we've failed to build truly inclusive and accessible pathways', also praising them for their 'boldness' and their 'refusal to settle for the status quo'. You can choose a different technique and try it out on your own experience and share it with friends or relatives. This site, like time, does not stand still, so it is constantly being improved by specialists and adding new techniques and games.
Harry - who has previously spoken at length about his mental health struggles after his mother Princess Diana died - took part in a conversation on stage in the Nevada city with two young people, who are holders of The Legacy Award in her memory. 'That's not just inspiring - it's the kind of untapped potential we can't afford to overlook. Far too many young people are locked out of leadership pipelines because we've failed to build truly inclusive and accessible pathways.' Also on stage were Sikander 'Sonny' Khan from Michigan and Christina Williams from Jamaica, who are holders of The Legacy Award, as well as Paul Fipps, president of global customer operations for AI software company ServiceNow, which is partnering with the organisation.
They have little or no sense of national identity, ‘nation' being a dirty word. They are far more interested in identity politics, such as trans issues and questions of race and so-called white privilege. The only thing they really seem to care about is how they come across on social media - a kind of ‘does my virtue look big in this?' mentality. How they ever managed to go on to live anything even resembling a normal existence is a mystery to me. But somehow, they did.
They knew the value of life, you see, understood how precious and precarious it is. They had survived: they owed it to those who did not to keep going. Harry, who appeared emotional and close to tears through much of the interview, offered an olive branch, saying he could 'forgive my family's involvement', naming Charles, the Prince of Wales and his stepmother, the Queen, in events since he began dating his wife Meghan in 2016. The health of the King, who is being treated for cancer, was highlighted by his son, who said: 'And I said, life is precious.
I don't know how much longer my father has, he, he won't speak to me because of this security stuff, but it would be nice to reconcile.' I have no doubt that his experience was by no means unusual. We wave our little flags today, pile the cream and jam on our scones, chink our teacups. But what that generation endured is hard to fathom, decades on. No technology, no phones, relatively basic medicine, no touchy-feely therapy sessions. It was do or die; you had no choice but to get on with it.
And don't get me wrong, it was wonderful to see so many people thronging the Mall, and all those street parties (in defiance of the gloomy weather). But for me, at any rate, the official celebrations were just tinged with… well, an inescapable sense of melancholy.<img src="https://www.freepixels.com/class="; style="max-width:400px;float:left;padding:10px 10px 10px 0px;border:0px;" alt="" />
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