Muslims have historically made it their mission to eradicate Israel, and on October 7, 2023, about 1,200 Israeli men, women, and children were massacred by Hamas terrorists.
Immediately after the attack, protests and violent demonstrations spiked on United States college and university campuses – in favor of the terrorists – but Club Z's Jake Donnelly says contrary to the narrative, that antisemitism did not pop up all at once.
"This is not a tsunami or a rising tidal wave of antisemitism," he asserts. "This is a dormant volcano that has finally exploded. This was always there underneath the surface."
Fewer campus demonstrations are reported now compared to the year following the Oct. 7 attack, but what will 2026 look like?
"It depends on the politics of the nation," Donnelly submits. "Right now, you have a lot of people on both sides of the aisle who … stoke the flames of Jew hatred, and I'm very, very scared about that."
Politically, he predicts "a sorting of Jews."
"You might see Jews flock out of places like New York City, like L.A.," he poses. "Specifically, the more orthodox religious Jews who vote like 90+% conservatively, you'll see them leave those areas."
Noting there are already fewer applications from Jewish students to go to Ivy League institutions, he also expects to see fewer Jews going to elite colleges and institutions – what he calls "indoctrination centers." From an American perspective, he says that is how it should be.
Donnelly also thinks America will see fewer antisemitic incidents in 2026, but they will be more violent.
"Instead of 10,000 bombs, you're going to get two atom bombs," he predicts.