After years on the political fringes, support for making the war-torn Palestinian enclave into a Jewish community is gaining support across Israel.
ed note–as always, lots of ‘must knows’ that every war-weary Gentile with a vested interest in his/her own future survival needs to understand about all of this.
Firsto, ladies and Gentile-men, yes, we have indeed published hundreds of articles on this website dealing with the issue of the Jews and their plans for ‘Greater Israel’, and there is nothing new or earthquaking about the contents of the story below.
The reason we chose to run this story was because of the title and the fact that the adjective ‘extremist’ was used in describing those Jews who indeed are planning to run the Gentiles out of their ancestral homelands in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, etc as the necessary precursor to creating this thing known as ‘Greater Israel’.
Now, in the interests of ‘full disclosure’ and of ‘journalistic integrity’, we’ll state up front that indeed, we did ‘modify’ the title a bit in order to get the point across that was otherwise lacking…
…except for the word ‘Extremist’, which indeed was in the original title, but without the quotation marks.
And in explaining why this is so earthquakingly important, we’ll start with a lil’ pictographical digression as we are often wont to do here on this humble little informational endeavor–

What you see before you is a water molecule, good old ‘H2O’, the building block of all life on earth, and without which, nothing could exist.
Now, what is the difference between good old ‘H2O’ and any other drink, such as soda, milk, orange juice, etc?
Well, H2O is pure, unadulterated, and ‘uneffected’ water, whereas the others start with water and then add things to them to make them what they are.
So, does this mean that ‘H2O’ is ‘extreme’ water?
No, it’s just water in its most basic and pure form…
And how/why does all of this relate to the ‘extremist’ Jews described in the news piece below?
Because they are not ‘extremists’. They are just Jews according to the most basic and pure form of Judah-ism that has existed since the book of ‘Jenesis’.
Those Jews that (claim to) oppose all of the tenets of PURE and ‘UNAFFECTED’ Judah-ism are in fact (if they are telling the truth, which is always a big question mark) apostates who are denying one of the most basic tenets of their ‘faith’. For any ‘Jew’ who claims to be a ‘practicing’ Jew to say that Israel does not have a ‘legal’ right to the promised land is like a ‘Christian’ saying that he/she does not believe in the historical existence of the person of Jesus Christ.
So what are we to make then of those ‘good Jews’ who say that they practice their ‘Judah-ism’ and say that based upon that ‘Judah-ism’ they practice, that it is only ‘extremist’ Jews who want to take over the ‘promised land’?
Well, the bottom line is, they are lying folks, surprise, surprise, the Jews and their lies…
Judah-ism, in its most basic, pure, and UNAFFECTED state, just like good old ‘H2O’ is very clear on this matter, and has been since these words were first written down in that book known as ‘Jenesis’, to wit–
‘On that day the LORD made a covenant with Abraham, saying ‘To your descendants I give this land, from the river of Egypt to the great river Euphrates’… Book of Genesis, 15:18
‘And God spoke unto us saying, ‘Go to the hill-country and all the places nigh thereunto… in the Arabah, the hill-country and in the Lowland… in the South and by the sea-shore, the land of the Canaanites, and Lebanon, as far as the great river, the river Euphrates…Go in therefore and possess the land which the Lord swore unto your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, unto them and to their seed after them…’ Book of Deuteronomy 1:6–8
‘Every place whereupon the sole of your foot shall tread shall be yours, from the wilderness, and Lebanon, from the river Euphrates, even unto the hinder sea, this shall be your border…’ Book of Deuteronomy
‘…From the wilderness, and this Lebanon, even unto the great river, the Euphrates, all the land of the Hittites, and unto the Great Sea toward the going down of the sun, shall be your border…’ Book of Joshua
‘When the Lord your God brings you into the land he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, he will give you a land with large, flourishing cities you did not build, houses filled with all kinds of good things you did not provide, wells you did not dig, and vineyards and olive groves you did not plant…’ Book of Deuteronomy
etc, etc, etc…
And these passages, ladies and Gentile-men (along with many others stating the same thing that we could also list but won’t for reasons of brevity) have never been removed from that ‘Holy of Holies’ known as the Torah, which is as much the foundation of ALL forms of Judah-ism as good old ‘H2O’ is the foundation of all life on this planet.
So, in short, folks, those Jews who plan to mass murder and then drive out the Palestinians, Syrians, Lebanese, and everyone else in making good on the ‘promise’ they say was given to them concerning ownership of every square inch of land between the Nile and Euphrates rivers ARE NOT ‘extremist Jews’…
…They are just ‘Jews’, every bit as much as ‘H2O’ is water.
NBC News
A river of Israeli flags winds through a desert path as hundreds of people, young and old, march toward the border in a display of their determination to build new Jewish settlements atop the rubble of northern Gaza.
So few buildings are left standing after Israeli bombardment that the Mediterranean is visible in the distance.
Daniella Weiss, founder of the radical right-wing settler group Nachala, sums up the crowd’s intentions.
‘We are here to begin the construction of new Jewish communities in Gaza,’ she told NBC News in an interview at the border in late April.
‘What we did in Judea and Samaria, we are going to do the same thing here,’ Weiss added, a reference to the Israeli-occupied West Bank, where illegal Jewish outposts and settler violence against Palestinians have grown dramatically in recent years.
While the march toward Gaza was a symbolic one, the statement it made still resonates across the Middle East.
It also marks the journey Weiss and her hard-line movement have made from the fringes of Israeli society toward the political mainstream, propelled by the Hamas-led Oct. 7, 2023 attack.
Weiss, who has referred to the events of Oct. 7 as a ‘miracle,’ told NBC News that it had changed history by showing ‘the world, very expressively, what Hamas wants to do with us.’
As early as Oct. 9, 2023, 20 members of Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, signed a letter demanding absolute control over the strip as one of the four goals of the war.
This gave the movement its first tailwind.
The Israeli military campaign that followed Oct. 7 displaced around 90% of Gaza’s population, according to the United Nations. The offensive killed more than 72,500 people, according to the Ministry of Health in Gaza. And in the nearly seven months since a ceasefire, continued Israeli attacks have killed over 845 people, the ministry says.
Today, the Nachala movement’s vision of turning Gaza into a thriving Jewish community is very much alive, and Palestinians do not exist anywhere in this version of a Jewish Gaza.
‘The 2 million or whatever number of Arabs, Gazans, who live here will not live in Gaza,’ Weiss said. ‘It can take a week, it can take a few months, but eventually they will not live here.’
Weiss and others with similar beliefs are getting a boost from the highest echelons of the Israeli government. While Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he does not support Jewish resettlement of Gaza, he helms the most right-wing government in the country’s history, which includes several hard-right settler leaders like Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.
Speaking to a crowd in a synagogue earlier last month, Smotrich said that ‘Gaza needs to be all ours, entirely Jewish, through Israeli settlement. The enemy must leave and find their luck elsewhere.’
But while they are growing in power domestically, Nachala, Weiss, and the settlement movement in general have been condemned internationally.
The British government hit them with sanctions in May 2025. According to a statement released by the U.K. Foreign Office, Weiss was ‘involved in threatening, perpetrating, promoting and supporting acts of aggression and violence’ against Palestinians. Nachala was involved with ‘facilitating, inciting, promoting and providing logistical and financial support’ for illegal outposts and the forced displacement of Palestinians in the West Bank and Israel, it said.
The Canadian government has also imposed sanctions on Weiss.
The United States has not sanctioned Weiss or Nachala, although in 2024 under President Joe Biden it did sanction four extremist settlers in the West Bank.
Meanwhile, settlements in the West Bank — where an estimated 700,000 Jews live among about 3 million Palestinians — are considered illegal under international law. Israel views West Bank settlements as legal if they are authorized by the government.
In Gaza in 2005, between 8,000 and 9,000 Israeli settlers were removed under the government of Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, who argued that the 21 settlements were expensive and hard to defend. The scenes of security personnel forcibly removing weeping and resistant settlers deeply divided Israeli society. But until recently, the idea of returning Israeli settlements to Gaza remained a nostalgic dream reserved for those on the extreme right fringes, viewed by the majority as a messy and expensive experiment best left in the past.
Today however, the idea of resettling Gaza also appears to be gaining popularity among more mainstream Israelis.
A poll from August 2025 conducted by the Smith Institute and published by Israeli news site Walla showed that 49% of Israeli Jews supported the occupation of Gaza and the complete displacement of Palestinians. Another survey from mid-2025 commissioned by Pennsylvania State University, conducted by Geocartography, an Israeli polling firm, and published by liberal newspaper Haaretz, showed that 82% of Israeli Jews supported the forcible expulsion of Palestinians from Gaza.
Weiss, meanwhile, says she’s undeterred and that her ambitions for Jewish settlers like herself extend beyond the West Bank and Gaza.
‘It’s a turning point in history which made us, the Jewish nation,’ she said, referring to Oct. 7. ‘Now I’m going to settle Gaza and Lebanon and Syria.’
On the same day Nachala marched to the border with Gaza, a small group of right-wing activists entered Lebanon illegally. They published videos of themselves walking inside the country on Israel’s northern border, some waving the Israeli flag and declaring their intention to settle.
‘Jewish settlement in Lebanon is ahead of us,’ one of the men said as he gestured north.
The activists were later detained by the Israel Defense Forces and ‘transferred to the Israel Police for further handling,’ the IDF said in a statement.