“All Cretans are liars.”
Epimenides’ famous paradox, a version of which burnt out the circuits of an android in a Star Trek episode, creates a non-resolvable logical contradiction, since Epimenides was a Cretan.
Can something similar be said of Al Qaeda?
Reading through the accounts of Zacarias Moussaoui’s sentencing trial, I found this little snippet in the CNN report:
[Judge Leonie Brinkema] then told Moussaoui, “You must promise to the court that you will tell the truth.”
Moussaoui responded, “Yes, I can.”
Prosecutors have said Moussaoui, 37, a French citizen of Moroccan heritage, deserves to die, saying that if he had not lied after his arrest, investigators could have uncovered the September 11 conspiracy.
When Zerkin asked Moussaoui why he lied, Moussaoui replied, “Because I am al Qaeda.”
“The Prophet says, ‘war is deceit,’” Moussaoui later told prosecutor Robert Spencer. “You’re allowed to lie for jihad. You’re allowed any technique to defeat your enemy.”
At last we have the doctrine of taqiyya in the public record, in a federal trial transcript, and spread throughout the MSM.
Honestly, do we have to pay any more attention to the press spokesmen for Hamas? To the Iranian foreign minister? Or, say, to the Saudi ambassador?
Cretans, one and all.
Notice that when he was told that he must tell the truth, Moussaoui said, “Yes, I can.”
Is that simply a syntactic error of a non-native English speaker? Or a distinction like the meaning of “is”?
In any case, we have a very clear statement of Islamist doctrine. We ignore it at our peril.
You’re allowed to lie for jihad. You’re allowed any technique to defeat your enemy.
The only trouble is this: because a Cretan said it, it can’t be true!
A stunner in court today, IMO.
I’ve resolved, if only in my own mind, the paradox as far as Moussaoui is concerned: he’ll tell the truth to further the cause of Allah.
Titus Ch 1: V 12
“One of themselves, a prophet of their own, said, “Cretans are always liars, evil beasts, lazy gluttons.”
P.S. Arabs are not liars, they just have no concept of the truth, sort of like Dan Rather: “Fake but Accurate.”
It’s easily resolved.
When you already know the answer, you don’t need to ask the man a question.
Action still speaks louder than words.