Because of their royal titles, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle could not be completely leading private lives in the United States as critic claims they even run the risk of Archie and Lilibet turning into "valuable prey" for local tabloid websites.Toby Melville - Pool/Getty Images

Several regulations come with being a Royal. From etiquette to old customs, the British Royals are held to extremely high standards.

When Prince Harry and Meghan Markle decided to stand down as Royals in 2020, they not only absolved themselves of these conventions but also released their children from a life of rules. Their two children, Archie and Lilibet, now face far fewer restrictions than their Royal cousins.

Royal Family Rules That Won't Affect Prince Harry, Meghan Markle's Children

You may have observed that the three children of Prince William and Kate Middleton, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis, usually wear formal clothes gowns. There's a good explanation behind this. It is deemed "suburban" not to dress young boys in shorts and girls in dresses among the upper class, nobility, and royals.

Furthermore, since they are no longer members of the royal family, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle can send their children to public schools if they so want. For security concerns, royal couples usually send their children to private schools. According to People, Prince George and Princess Charlotte both attended Thomas's Battersea Day School, which costs $23,000 a year, and dropped their royal titles while there.

While Prince Harry and Meghan Markle may not send their children to public school, they now have the option because they are not subject to Royal restrictions. Prince George and Princess Charlotte sat through Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's wedding ceremony without incident.

This is because Beaumont Politeness's Myka Meier taught the youngsters to correct etiquette. Lilibet will no longer need to go through this training because her parents are no longer senior royals. While for some, Monopoly is merely a fun board game to play with your pals, The Telegraph reports that the real estate board game can become crazy for the Queen.

When the Duke of York was given a Monopoly board game in 2008, it was disclosed. He said that it is not permitted in the royal family because it becomes too violent. The pair famously rejected the Queen's proposals to bestow a formal royal title to Archie, and they have yet to agree on one for Lilibet. Because Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are still formally the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, their children are not fully free of royal titles.

The Royal Family is quite stringent about adopting a political stance. Fortunately, Lilibet won't have to worry about the consequences in the future. Of course, this restriction never prevented her outspoken mother from criticizing former President Donald Trump in 2016.

Lilibet and Archie's parents have become considerably more politically active since they departed from Britain, so we may expect their children to do the same when they grow up.

Why Archie, Lilibet Might Be in Danger While Living in US?

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex may have stepped away from royal responsibilities in search of privacy, but even their sheltered living at their Montecito home in Santa Barbara, California, cannot protect them from public scrutiny.

The pair may no longer be able to control being photographed in public without their knowledge, according to critic Daniela Elser. She used the example of Prince Harry, Meghan Markle, and their 3-year-old son Archie witnessing a parade in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on July 4.

Another paradegoer took the photos and confirmed they were of royal family members. The netizen even came across the couple's bodyguard. But additional photographs - which have already been erased - appeared on Thursday showing the Sussexes, together with their three-year-old son Archie, which bring into question exactly how free their new lives might be, Elser wrote for News.com.au.

The royal critic questioned the privacy of Prince Harry, Meghan Markle, Archie, and Lilibet in the United States, where websites like TMZ and Radar Online will happily pay the public for smartphone images of celebrities out and about doing such scintillating things as standing, walking, and stocking up on loo paper, Your Tango reported

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