The late and disgraceful C.I.A. and Zionist-supported King Hussein of Jordan apparently once tried LSD.
A Hollywood starlet - Linda Christian - visited the King and brought acid to one of his hedonistic parties. The King did not hesitate to try it, but couldn’t hold his own and needed medical treatment. The King made the mistake of mixing acid with hummus and everyone knows the two do not go well together!!!
You have to read this Haaretz review of the new book on Hussein.
It shows just how much as an eccentric idiot the King was. He actually settled on the date to massacre Palestinians in Jordan based on the readings of a fortune teller. And although most already know that the Jordanian Kingdom has been in league with the Zionists since even before day one, it is important to reread such details for purpose of never forgetting how the Hashimite Kingdom betrayed and continues to betray the Palestinians and the Arab nation. Finally, it is nice to know that the King was too ashamed to open his C.I.A. money-filled envelopes. I hope we went to his grave with humiliation. His son and his YouTube wife only outdoes him in subservience to the “White Man” and the usurping Zionist entity.

[The King was a great friend of Saddam and had the “honor” of firing the first bullet in the Iraq-Iran War. His son, the current King, was very close friends with Saddam’s two bastard eldest sons and would frequent clubs together.]
But for all his moral failings, the Jordanian King almost appears to be a saint in comparison to the late Saudi King Fahd who was a serial womanizer and drunk, and whose was known to have had many STDs. And King Hussein could at least read Arabic, the idiot Saudi King - I swear to you - could not finish a sentence in classical Arabic without at several one mistake. The current Saudi King is also nearly illiterate.
Ya molok ya 3rab dahaboo ella sahraa!!!
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This is a Letter to the Editor of Ha’Aretz newspaper from the author of the book you use to condemn King Hussein so ferociously. It does not appear in the online edition (no letters to the editor do, for some reason), but it is in the printed edition that I get delivered every day.
“Remembering King Hussein for his contribution to peace”
“I would like to correct a number of points relating to my book, ‘King Hussein of Jordan,’ which appeared in Amir Oren’s article ‘Jordan’s King: LSD, fortune tellers, and Black September’ (Haaretz, March 1). Firstly, the title of the piece seems to me to miss altogether Hussein’s vital contribution during his long reign to the peace process with Isaael: what he called ‘bringing together the children of Abraham.’ In this worthy goal, he found a similarly committed peace partner during the early 1190s in Yitzhak Rabin.
“Second, I believe the article might lead your readers to misunderstand the nature of Hussein’s relations with the CIA across the decades. Ever since an article by Bob Woodward on this topic appeared in the Washington Post in February 1977, Hussein’s critics have lost no opportunity to claim that he was somehow ‘paid off by the CIA.’ But, as President Carter privately wrote to Hussein right after the Woodward article appeared, such allegations were ‘unfair’ and ‘misleading.’ As Carter put it, ‘there was nothing illegal or improper in your relationship with us.’ The implied comparison in Oren’s article with the current charges pending against Prime Minister Ehud Olmert seems to me to be wholly mistaken.
“Third, the sensationalized reference to LSD in the headline of the article, and the subsequent discussion of it might also lead readers to misunderstand the nature of the incident concerned. Hussein, like other guests at this gathering, was the victim of involuntary poisoning on the part of Ms. Christian.
“No doubt many Israelis who remember King Hussein’s moving oration at Yitzhak Rabin’s funeral or his extraordinary reaction to the appalling murder of Israeli schoolgirls at Baqura/Naharayim in March 1977, will feel that he deserves to be remembered for his contribution to peace and understanding between Arab and Israeli.”
(signed) Dr. Nigel Ashton, London School of Economics and Political Science
It’s not surprising to me that you start with a misleading headline but it is surprising that you quote an article from one of the most hard-line, anti-Palestinian Israeli journalists. I hope you do better research for your schoolwork than you do for these blogs.