I understand your perspective because it is where I was at one point, and I don't expect that you will come to my perspective from this conversation. I simply hope to lay out these pieces so that they are easier to recognize when the time comes. When you first recognize the Jewish problem, hate is the only thing that can be seen. It's like stepping out of a cave into the light - one is blind at first. As time goes on, your eyes begin to adjust to the new light, and you can see more details. This is the stage you're in right now, the hate gives you the energy and strength to go forwards in this blinding new reality that comes when one emerges from the cave. It is a necessary and important stage for the reasons you mention here. However, in time you will find that hate is not the prime mover, nor can it be. Why do you hate your enemy, if not that he is seeking to deny and destroy the things that you love? And, if this is the case, which is the stronger of the two emotions, the hate, or the love which causes you to have something worth hating for?
Pic related: Mars' love for Venus is why he must leave her and march to war. Without Venus' love, Mars is half, and he would be fighting simply to destroy, rather than to protect. If your goal is only destruction, it will not carry you through when times are hard. This is why leftists fight - they lack anything of beauty or value, so they seek to destroy that which is beautiful, so that their own ugliness isn't recognized.
P.S. You are again arguing against strawmen that you have built, which is why I do not respond to comments like "your disregard for this emotion". Hate is a necessary step, but it is not the final step, nor is it the step that built our world and civilizations. Read what I wrote as if it was written by someone who is fighting alongside you, rather than someone who is fighting against you and its meaning will be more clear - I assure you that I am every bit as dedicated to the goal as you are.
You're responding to the feminine, leftist ideal of love. I'm trying to explain the masculine concept of love, which is related to what you identify as symbols of power. The Totenkopf, for instance, is a symbol used to signify the triumph over death, the second birth of the Aryan tradition. It is a symbol of power, but it is a symbol of the power of triumph, of overcoming, of conquering, not of hatred. Allowing the left to define these as symbols of "hate" robs them of their esoteric meaning and true power. The key to passing through the black sun, to overcoming "death" and the dissolution of the soul, is to be driven by something that will allow you to withstand the challenges of the long, dark road that all who would triumph must face, and hate alone is insufficient for this task.