Nonviolent protest being useless aside, the people need to think outside the official narrative and realize that the (Abrahmic) religions they support is the problem, not (primarily) the politicians (this is still half-true). These religions either meddle in politics/government (like the late Frank Zappa mentioned), and/or need a political guise to carry out their plans effectively.
Recently, I've looked into the narrative fallacy. Just as recently, I've realized that the narrative is one of the only few things going for these religions; ever since the choice to separate religion and government was made in response to religious tyranny in the Middle Ages, a large number of people (Atheists primarily) simply assume incorrectly that only the government and the politicians are the problem and religion have nothing to do with it simply because of the narrative from that one choice in history. Nowadays, I find narratives to be a crutch at worst; while stories can be used to make sense of the world, people (outside this place, that is) have this tendency to over-rely on them to piece things together. And when they fail to have ALL the pieces, they double down and try again with the same method, thinking they would succeed in their next attempt.
In any case, people need to take official and extreme measures to declare physical war on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam in every capacity; without the politicians protecting these religions, things would quickly go downhill for them, and more critically, the Jewish plans for their conquest.