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People like Prince Andrew live by a rule book that the rest of us don’t even get to see. When ordinary people get accused of wrongdoing, they face real consequences — investigations, charges, public humiliation, the works. But when it’s a royal, the system suddenly becomes very delicate, very cautious, and very secretive. Doors that slam shut for everyone else magically open for them. Andrew, for instance, managed to dodge law enforcement interviews, avoid depositions for years, and settle a major sexual abuse lawsuit without ever admitting guilt. Every step of the way, his titles, connections, and family name served as a kind of diplomatic armor — the privilege of being born above accountability.
That’s the true “Rule Book for Royals”: deny everything, hide behind tradition, and let the palace machinery manage the damage. The same institutions that claim moral leadership close ranks to protect their own, wrapping scandal in ceremony and silence. For men like Andrew, shame isn’t career-ending — it’s just an image problem to be managed by courtiers, PR consultants, and lawyers on retainer. The royal playbook isn’t about justice or truth; it’s about preservation. And as long as the crown still glitters, the rule book that governs them will always have different laws — and fewer consequences.
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