There’s a reason that the Torah commands us not just to fight Amalek, but to wipe them out entirely. When you leave evil breathing, you don’t preserve morality, you only postpone tragedy.

 

 

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, as pointed out in an ed note accompanying a recent piece appearing here on this humble little informational endeavor, as much as it is a ‘fashionable’ thing to do these days for someone to make him/herself sound learned, schooled, and educated on the issue of the Jews viz the popular statement that the Jews have ‘abandoned’ their Torah in favor of the Talmud, this is simply not the truth. Furthermore, those whose ‘claim to fame’ is peddling this fantasy are attempting to paint a picture of reality that in fact simply does not exist.

 

Now, understandably, some will ask both rhetorically and literally why such ‘hair-splitting’ matters in the ‘bigger picture’, a fair question, and if there were not Apocalyptically-important issues involved, we would be in agreement.

 

However, simply understanding and acknowledging the fact that the Jews as a group, and with very few exceptions, are stark raving mad and inclined towards engaging in the worst behavior imaginable towards the 8 billion Gentiles living on God’s green earth is simply not enough. Indeed, there is a ‘method’ to their madness, and in the interest of preventing them from doing to all of us what they are constitutionally and institutionally inclined to do, this means understanding both this ‘method and madness’ within the qualitative and quantitative reality of what this ‘m&m’ are, and that means understanding Judah-ism for what it is.

 

Now, HAVING SAID ALL THAT, nota bene the following–

 

Our violent and deranged follower of Torah Judah-ism is making it clear that the Gentile Genocide that the Jews have been planning these last 3,000 years and which was set into motion on Oct. 7th is not over. The Jews, driven as they are by the commandments of their Torah Judah-ism to take over the world, are NOT going to be dissuaded by any ‘peace deals’ conjured up by a Goy leader out to prevent the incineration of the entire planet.

 

What this means is that at the very moment of this writing, they are plotting, they are scheming, and they will do their damndest, literally, in seeing to it that everything they have been ‘built’ to do takes place, that the ‘vision’ that has driven them for the last 3,000 years becomes reality, and to hell with any ‘peace deals’, to wit–

 

‘For the nation which will not bow down and serve you shall perish, it shall be utterly destroyed…’ Book of Isaiah

 

 

Juda Honickman for Israel National News

 

Over Simchat Torah, I heard it more times than I could count.

 

‘We can finally dance again…It’s over….How good it feels to breathe again.’

 

And I get it. After everything we’ve lived through – the pain, the uncertainty, the sleepless nights waiting for names, for faces, for any sign of life, who wouldn’t want to believe that this nightmare is finally behind us?

 

But let’s be clear: it’s not over.

 

Yes, of course we celebrate every life brought home. Every embrace. Every family reunited after two years of unimaginable hell. But celebration can’t replace vigilance. Because while some may call this closure, the truth is, closure only comes when every hostage is home, and when Hamas, the evil that tore through our nation, no longer exists to threaten our children or grandchildren, ever again.

 

Anything less isn’t an ending. It’s a pause.

 

There’s a reason the Torah commands us not just to fight Amalek, but to wipe them out entirely. It’s a hard Mitzvah to comprehend until you understand the nature of evil and see it for yourself.

 

Evil doesn’t vanish when you beat it. It hides. It waits. It returns.

 

King Saul made that mistake. He spared Agag, the king of Amalek. A single act of compassion that, on the surface, seemed noble. But from that one decision came Haman, the architect of another attempted genocide against our people centuries later.

 

When you leave evil breathing, you don’t preserve morality. You postpone tragedy.

 

So yes, we won this round. Israel stood tall. We reminded the world and ourselves that we are a people who refuse to break. But true victory isn’t about surviving the attack. It’s about ensuring it can never happen again.

 

And as long as even one of our hostages remains in enemy hands or one remnant of Hamas remains in power our victory is incomplete and our dance unfinished.

 

So dance, yes.

 

Celebrate life.

 

Feel the relief.

 

But don’t mistake this pause for ‘peace’.

 

Because the moment we declare the war over before the work is done, Amalek slowly starts to breathe again, and this time, we cannot let that happen.

 

We have to learn from the mistakes of our ancestors. To finish what they could not, to complete what they began. So that one day, we will truly dance again.

 

Not in relief. But in redemption.

 

In the rebuilt Jerusalem. In the Third Temple.

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