Iraqi Jewish Refugees Demand State, Threaten Massive Terrorism
Except, not really. Many Iraqi Jews - part of the 600,000 Jews who were expelled from Arab countries in 1948 - have returned home to vote. Since 1948, they've settled in new countries, started new lives, and never once hijacked an airliner, shot up a schoolbus, or blown up a cafe in order to "express their historical trauma." The United Nations never passes resolutions demanding justice for them, and it has never established agencies to help them live comfortably in refugee camps while waiting to "return home." And yet many of them have become quite successful.





