Wait, what are you talking about? You literally started talking about Christian Zionists in an article where the words "Judaism," "Christianity" or "Islam" doesn't appear even once.
The word "Jew" as it relates to Zionism, is about ethnicity, not religion. According to a 2015 poll, only around 30% of Israelis consider themselves to be religious.
It absolutely wasn't me who brought religion into this conversation.
And yes, many of Zionism's strongest opponents are Orthodox Jews (Exhibit A). That's not the same as saying that this is a majority view within the Orthodox Jewish community (I have no idea one way or the other), but to say that among the most outspoken critics of Zionism, many are Orthodox Jews. See the difference?
But yes, again, I mention this only to highlight the obvious difference between anti-Zionism and anti-semitism. The people who conflate them do so only because they know Zionism is indefensible on its own and so hide behind religion.
I don't want Israeli Jews to be refugees, nor do I particularly want the "demise of Israel." I want justice. Whether that looks like a single democratic state with equal rights for all or two separate states side-by-side, well, that probably is out of my lane. I'm a humanist, so I prefer fewer states to more, but I'm also a realist, so I understand that a single state with Israelis and Palestinians peacefully coexisting is probably a pipe dream at the moment.
But the options are not simply: "maintain the current status quo" or "all the Jews need to die/be displaced." I don't consider either of these options to be acceptable.