Yet you exaggerate numbers, like 700,000 to 10,000, both completely arbitrary numbers with no historical value. Then you claim there are more in LA than in Iran, with no numbers cited and I'm not even asking for sources because I know you'll just flip a number and then emphatically claim that it is no use to argue with you, since you're an expert with Jewish friends.
The Jews in Iran have the same rights as the Muslims there.
Oh I am arguing this point, for sure. See, he is trying to claim that Muslims will suffer no infidels in their land, but this is simply not true, they will even host Jews, not to mention other religions. There is even a Jew and a few Buddhists in Afghanistan, where the political regime is in fact hostile to non-Muslims.
How welcome are non-Jews in Israel? Goldstein is a hero among settlers.
your source-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persian_Jews even though you didnt list it as such.
Wikipedia numbers are hardly the Gold Standard, even when you do not source them as wikipedia.
even wikipedia recognizes that when the Supreme Leader of iran says something, it's alwaays best to double check:
[h=2]"However, the 2011 census recorded only 8,756 Jews in Iran.[SUP]
[3][/SUP] "[/h]izzat some cherry picking youre doing? why yes, yes it is.
also, yes, i accidentally added a 0, 70,000 is the pre-revolution jewish population in iran, now less than 10,000 according to their own census.
[h=3]The United States[/h] The United States is home to 60,000–80,000 Iranian Jews, most of whom have settled in the
Greater Los Angeles area and in
Great Neck, New York. Those in metropolitan Los Angeles have settled mostly in the affluent
Westside cities of
Beverly Hills and
Santa Monica and the Los Angeles Westside neighborhoods of
Brentwood,
Westwood, and
West L.A., as well as the
San Fernando Valley communities of
Tarzana and
Encino. According to the former mayor of Beverly Hills, Iranians make up at least a fifth of the resident population of Beverly Hills (the large majority of them Jewish),[SUP]
[11][/SUP] and a third of the student body at the
local high school.[SUP]
[12][/SUP][SUP]
[13][/SUP] Following the 1979
Iranian Revolution, tens of thousands of Persian Jews migrated from Iran, forming one of the wealthiest waves of immigrants to ever come to the United States.[SUP]
[14][/SUP]
[h=3]California[/h] According to the US Census Bureau's 2010
American Community Survey, 26% of Beverly Hills' 34,000 residents are of Iranian origin.[SUP]
[89][/SUP] On March 21, 2007,
Jimmy Delshad, a Persian Jew who immigrated to the United States in 1958, became the mayor of Beverly Hills. This election made Delshad one of the highest ranking elected Iranian-American officials in the United States. He once again took the post of mayor of Beverly Hills on March 16, 2010.
Prominent Persian Jewish congregations in the Los Angeles area include Nessah Synagogue and the Eretz-Siamak Cultural Center. Persian Jews also constitute a large part of the membership at
Sinai Temple in Westwood, one of the largest
Conservative congregations in the United States. Nessah Synagogue is the biggest Persian Jewish Synogague having about hundreds of Persian Jews attending there different services on the Sabbath. Founded by Rabbi David Shofet and the Iranian Jews of Los Angeles and Beverly Hills, upholds the traditions and customs of Iranian Jews according to Orthodox, Sephardic Halacha. Coming together to form a vibrant community, participating in holy days, festivals and Torah study, as well as many social and educational programs, Nessah is the “home away from home” for Iranian Jews and with open arms, welcomes all Jews.
meh, dont know why i even bother.
you wont look at data even from YOUR OWN SOURCE if it contradicts your stated position.