Please let's not jump to any conclusions. Conclusion jumping must be avoided in the cases of Muslims killing people.
Or rather we must jump to any and every other possible conclusion.
This particular Muslim was homicidally suicidal... but in a non-Islamic way.
A 28-year-old Jordanian Muslim who who was studying to become a pilot died after crashing a small plane Tuesday afternoon in Connecticut, and the instructor pilot who survived the crash said it was intentional. Arian Prevalla, another pilot on the plane said, “the crash was not an accident”.
Local and state police, along with several federal agencies, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation, National Transportation Safety Board and the Federal Aviation Administration, are now investigating the crash.
Let's not jump to any conclusions.
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy warned Wednesday that the public should not jump to conclusions about the reasons for the crash.
"As a nation, we have all had to adjust to a new reality,'' Malloy told reporters at the Capitol. "When events such as this occur, we recognize that people almost automatically wonder if someone meant to do us harm. But we must exercise caution about jumping to conclusions before discovering and considering all of the facts.''
When asked if there is a no-fly zone over the Pratt & Whitney complex in East Hartford, Malloy said, "That's a rather large site, so I hadn't considered that — next to an international airport, as well as a local airport that has limited-size airplanes available to it.''
Why is there such a zone? P and W is a defense contractor. But yes, the official narrative has emerged that Feras M. Freitekh, the Jordanian pilot, was upset over his poor performance and decided to commit suicide. It's just coincidence that it happened near a defense contractor. These coincidences and sudden outbreaks seem to happen quite a bit among "Jordanians". But I'm sure we should believe the narrative. After all it's not like Muslim student pilots here have killed anyone.