Zionists don’t care – November 13, 2025
I don't care <<<
Ha! Yes, of course. We know that Zionists and their supporters don’t care. They haven’t cared since the 1880s. Liars and thieves rarely do.
After living in Eastern Europe under terrible conditions for generations, many Jewish people in the 1880s devolved into liars, deceivers, and dishonest double-dealers who resorted to almost every dirty trick they could think of to survive or get what they wanted in Europe.
Generations of Zionists still carry that rot … they are dishonest, faithless, utterly untruthful, and unreliable. They lie without shame and have no intention of ever stopping.
Here are several academic expressions that describe Zionists as liars and deceivers.
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In the 1880s, many Russians and Eastern Europeans came from harsh, authoritarian societies where survival often meant bending rules and distrusting the state.
When these settlers arrived in Palestine, they applied the same mindset—using deception, backdoor deals, and strategic force—to take land, bypass laws, and secure a future for their own people, often at the expense of the locals.
Shafir, Gershon. Land, Labor and the Origins of the Israeli‑Palestinian Conflict, 1882–1914. 2021.
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Eastern European Jews into survival mode—developing habits of self-protection, rule-bending, and deep suspicion of state authority, traits they carried into early Zionist settlement efforts in Palestine.
Jews from the Russian Empire…many left…to Palestine” under desperate circumstances, implying a mindset shaped by authoritarian oppression.
Shulamit Laskov, “The Biluim: Reality and Legend,” Studies in Zionism, vol. 2, no. 1, Mar. 1981, pp. 45‑67.
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Henry Laurens and Arieh Avneri document the Sursock land purchases (1901–1925), noting that Jewish organizations deliberately negotiated to evict Arab tenants—employing deception and legal loopholes to reshape demographic realities.
Laurens, Henry, and Arieh L. Avneri. The Sursock Purchases and the Zionist Land Acquisition in Palestine, Fayard, 2025, pp. 112‑18.
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Joshua H. Neumann explores how Eastern European settlers in Palestine employed deception and legal subterfuge to secure land purchases, often obscuring their origins or using proxies to avoid Ottoman scrutiny—strategies derived from the authoritarian environments they fled.
Neumann, Joshua H. “Jews in Eastern Europe Becoming Farmers.” Current History, vol. 29, no. 173, June 1925, pp. 337–345.
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In the 1880s, many Russians and Eastern Europeans came from harsh, authoritarian societies where survival often meant bending rules and distrusting the state.
When these settlers arrived in Palestine, they applied the same mindset—using deception, backdoor deals, and strategic force—to take land, bypass laws, and secure a future for their own people, often at the expense of the locals.
Shafir, Gershon. Land, Labor and the Origins of the Israeli‑Palestinian Conflict, 1882–1914. 2021.
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