Posted on 11/04/2001 11:46:32 AM PST by VA Advogado
POP legend Michael Jackson has given the most amazing and astonishing interview of his life to the News of the World. He insists he is about to be tested for anthrax posioning after bursting out in a mystery rash ...and says he once proposed to Princess Diana. "We were like two caged animals," he adds. Jackson, 43, spoke to the News of the World through his psychic best friend Uri Geller! Our associate editor Phil Taylor and Uri, the world-famous author, paranormalist and psychic conducted the interview by phone from Uri's Berkshire mansion. This is what Jackson had to say... NoW: Are you worried about the anthrax attacks in America and are you taking any precautions? Jackson: Yes. I'm taking medication myself. Because-I don't know if I should say this-I'm very sick. NoW: You're coughing a lot. Do you have the flu? Jackson: I don't know. They're going to test me and the children for anthrax. We're all very, very sick right now. I've never felt so bad in my entire life. (Michael has custody of two children by estranged wife Debbie Rowe Prince Michael Jnr, nicknamed Baby Doo Doo and pictured right with Jacko, is four, and daughter Paris Michael Katherine is two.) NoW: Are you scared? Jackson: No. I'm just praying that it's not getting worse. I feel very, very weak and sick. NoW: Can you describe your symptoms? Jackson: My chest burns very, very much. It's hard to breathe. And when I swallow it stings. It burns so bad. You can't stop coughing. And your eyes burn. And you're tired all the time. And your back hurts very much. There are some rashes. I've been seeing the doctor every day. They're going to take me in and do tests with me and my children." NoW: Are you taking anything to treat it? Jackson: Yes. And I won't open any envelopes now. I don't want to open anything. I'm very concerned about the children. I pray for them constantly. That's my main concern. I want them to be safe. How can you explain to them what's going on, and make them feel everything will be OK? NoW: Do you think the Afghanistan crisis could result in World War III? Jackson: I think a lot of what is going on is Biblically prophesied. But God promises he will not let man destroy the earth. That man will try, but he will not let them do it. NoW: How much do you think America changed after the terrorist attack on September 11? Jackson: People have never been so close in this country. Everybody has flags up everywhere. They speak again to each other. They say hello. They're hugging. It's like we've gone back to the 1930s or something. NoW: How did you feel when the terrorists attacked New York? Jackson: I felt my world end. I felt such grief. I cried and I cried. The conversation eventually turns to his album. NoW: You've written a song called Privacy On Invincible. Is it about Princess Diana? Jackson: Oh boy! Y'know...we shared the same life. We shared the same pain. And that's what we could talk about on the phone. We were like two caged animals. We could talk about it. And that was our therapy-speaking to each other. NoW: What was the most memorable thing Diana ever told you? Jackson: To continue the work I'm doing to help the children. And whatever I do, don't stop. To continue to love and to travel and to go to the hospitals. That was her favourite thing about me-how much I loved them, sincerely, from the heart. NoW: Did you love Princess Diana? Jackson: I'm crazy about her. I adored her. NoW: Would you have married Princess Diana if you'd had the chance? Jackson: Yes! Yes! NoW: Did you ever propose to her? Jackson: Uhmm. There was some talk between us. NoW: So did you have a chance to ask Diana to marry you? Jackson: Er...oohh. NoW: Come on, Michael. The whole world wants to know. Jackson: We talked in that area. I will say that much. I think we lost a precious jewel when she died. We lost the heart of the world. It was like when we lost Mother Teresa. The world isn't the same place any more. NoW: What's the best thing about being a pop star? Jackson: Getting to share your gift from God with the world and hope and pray they accept it and love it. I just want to make wonderful music and give them a treat to the eye with song and dance and a sense of escapism, that's all really. NoW: What was the loneliest time of your life? Jackson: The loneliest? Oh boy, that's a tough one. I'm always lonely. NoW: Are you lonely now? Jackson: Of course. It's part of what I have to go through to be the artist that I am. I have to paint with a palette of different emotions. NoW: What was the saddest time in your childhood? Jackson: Wanting to be with other children and I couldn't. I was thrust into an adult world. All my childhood I was with grown-ups-playing nightclubs and fights break out and people drinking-Chicago, New York, Indiana, and all throughout the south and Philadelphia. I was never with children. NoW: Were you ever physically abused? Jackson: Of course, of course. I was beat up a lot when I was a little kid. NoW: When you addressed the Oxford Union earlier this year you criticised your father for not showing you enough love as a child and depriving you of your childhood. Do you regret making that speech? Jackson: No. Because out of the criticism came forgiveness. The speech was about how to forgive our parents for their wrongdoing and laziness. And I had a lot of harsh bitterness embedded in my soul. It was so bad that whenever I've been in the presence of my father-even now-I feel dizzy. I feel like I'm going to faint. NoW: Have you spoken to your father since? Jackson: Yes. He was at the Garden show (Madison Square Garden in New York where he celebrated 30 years in showbiz last month). I love him and I totally forgive him. NoW: What made you write the track Speechless? Jackson: Oh I love Speechless. I'd had a water balloon fight with kids. And right afterwards I ran upstairs and wrote Speechless in, like, 45 minutes, I really did. NoW: Tell me about the message in your song The Lost Children. Jackson: I'm saying there are souls out there that are lost. People who have disappeared and have never been found again. I remember when I was a little kid, I was in a department store with my mother. I was no more than five, I think. I turned around and she was gone. I'll never forget the feeling. I felt my world was ending. So imagine really, really being lost. It's like Armageddon of the brain. NoW: Finally Michael, are you at all optimistic about the world's future? Jackson: Very. When I see a baby smile, I bubble with a sense of bliss. And I believe in that smile. I see God in that smile. © Copyright News of the World, 2001.
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A:When the big hand touches the little hand.
Oy! Just goes to show how screwed up our Child Protective System is, that this freak has custody of his children!
Test for Rabies
I think Michael is afraid of germs. He usually wears something to cover his mouth and nose. He must be miserable to live like that. He reminds me of Howard Hughes.
What's the difference between Michael Jackson and a grocery bag? One's made of plastic and is dangerous for children to play with, and the other's used to carry groceries.
I concur.
MICHEAL JACKSON LEAVES WALLMART AFTER ATTENDING
THE " LITTLE BOYS BREIFS HALF-OFF" SALE
Didn't know that. She's just as sick and twisted as he. Maybe more since she did it for the $$
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