Alleged “Holocaust” survivors to receive $25 million
By: David Mullenax
A federal judge has temporarily awarded Hungarian Jews $25 million in reparations payments for alleged U.S. troop misbehavior in WWII. Plaintiffs in the case aver that U.S. soldiers confiscated Hungarian possessions from a German train, which were never returned. The lawsuit, however, offered no evidence of misconduct relying exclusively on accusations from the accusers.
In a stinging indictment against the West, U.S. district Judge Patricia Seitz astonishingly called the plaintiffs “peacemakers” remarking that the lawsuit grants “the opportunity to step up to correct an injustice that may have occurred 60 years ago.”
Observers of the case question the ruling based on the lack of evidence and point to Judge Seitz’s own closing comments that the legal system must rule on facts, and not on incidents that “may have occurred”.
Many European-American taxpayers disagree with Judge Seitz’s assessment and question the double standard applied to Israel regarding their refusal to compensate Palestinians for illegal confiscation of property and possessions, and Israeli diplomats ignoring Palestinian claims in what is referred to as “the right of return”.
Moreover, survivors of the victims of the WWII bombing campaign in Dresden, Germany, which inflicted numerous casualties on the city’s innocent civilians – some estimates as high as 100,000, desperately seek remembrances and compensation for the crimes committed against them by Allied forces.



