Harry is erratic and unstable – he’s got NO friends & Ring doorbell chaos proves it, expert says

PRINCE Harry's doorbell fiasco shows he's erratic, unstable, and has no friends, an expert says.
The Duke of Sussex was pictured knocking on at least three houses before finding the right one, claiming he was "looking for a friend."
The Ring doorbell snap shows Harry, 40, tieless in a blue suit with a phone to his right ear.
Harry had argued at the Court of Appeal that his “life was at stake” when in Britain, after his automatic right to 24-hour gun cops was removed, when he and his wife Meghan quit as working royals.
However since his plea for security, the Prince has been spotted in war-torn Ukraine and also wandering about the street knocking on houses.
News commentator Samara Gill believes the photo was a snapshot into Prince Harry's well-being.
She said: "That photo was so revealing.
"It basically shows that Harry is as erratic and unstable as a lot of us have been speculating.
"The fact he's been pining over security and protection, but actually in the real world doesn't really care - it shows a lot."
Samara suggested that the Prince has been seeking out protection to put him on par with his brother.
"It's all about his anxiety that he has with William, he wants to be the same, he wants the same," she continued.
"It's just feeding into this paranoia that Harry has increasingly been showing and he looks very displaced in the ring photograph."
Legendary Royal photographer Arthur Edwards questioned why Harry wouldn't be able to remember where his friend lived.
He said: "He must have a poor memory or not seen he friends for a long while because he knocked on three or four doors.
"In fact, one of the housekeepers said she didn't even recognize him.
"It was bizarre - and what was storage was that it was the day when he was in court trying to get the government to pay for his police protection."
Prince Harry's biggest bombshells:
The Duke lost his publicly-funded security appeal in a humiliating blow on May 2.
Harry always said the three-and-a-half year legal battle "mattered" more to him than anything else - including his privacy rows with the press.
After he lost the case , Harry then gave an interview to the BBC in California in which he hit out again at the Royals.
Harry branded the lost appeal as a complete "surprise" and appeared shocked that he would not be receiving any further security.
The news led him to turn his back on the UK and claim he would no longer be visiting his homeland.
He said: "A lot more has come out, I felt it needed to come out, the other side of the story needed to be told and I don't regret that at all.
"I couldn't believe, I thought with all the disagreements and chaos, the one thing I could rely on is my family keeping me safe."
In the scathing attack after losing his appeal, the Duke of Sussex unleashed a host of new claims including how his dad Charles is no longer speaking to him.
He had moaned he was "singled out" after his round-the-clock royal protection was axed in the wake of Megxit.
The Prince insisted said he would "love reconciliation" with the royal family but claims whether they will make up will ultimately be up to his father, saying: "It's in his hands."
Shortly after the wave-making interview, the BBC admitted an embarrassing "lapse in standards" over its coverage of Harry's security case court loss.
The following morning, the BBC flagship current affairs programme Radio 4 stunned listeners in a one-sided interview with former close protection officer Richard Aitch.
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