Recently, I have been looking over many topics of interest on the net NOT related to anything about the Jews or Israel and yet I was surprised to come across many essays, articles and reviews of events in Jewish history so as to point out that there is some kind of world-wide conspiracy by the Jews to take over the world? Although I find it laughable really I thought I would place it here for discussion not as a means to offend but to understand this thinking as it is the first time I have 'heard' of it:
I think that the entire idea is ridiculous. The problem that this article does not address is that Jews have inter married with so many other races for so many generations that it is no longer a case of pure Jewish sects being scattered. In fact, outside of Israel, there really isn't allot of pure Jews around the world.
To add that, even as one giant force of people, there aren't nearly enough Jews to take over the world. In fact, because of the persecution of Jews so often, the race of pure Jews has dwindled greatly over the last hundred years. If there was a conspiracy to have nations drive you out and scatter you among the world, the conspiracy died when hitler killed so many during world war two.
Jews can act so well "in unison" by keeping their scholars at the centre of their culture. Rabbis are required to study the Torah and the Talmud and, since the dissolution of the Jewish priesthood and the centralization of Judaism with it, Rabbis have been the leaders of each Jewish community. As a scholar, the Rabbi is capable of paying attention to the observances of traditions as well as intelligently reinterpreting precedent to fit novel situations. Even in rabbinical Judaism, Rabbis remain in communication with other Rabbis when possible, so new, intelligent commentaries on the Torah could take a long time to become well-known in the pre-information age, but they would still get there eventually.
In addition, I fail to understand what unanimity is actually being claimed here. If religious agreement is suggested, that is sensible to some degree since each separate Jewish community bases their religion on the same teachings. To the degree which this does not make sense, it is also not true - each Jewish community has differences in belief, actions and political leanings which were even more pronounced before worldwide instant communication.
Of course, the author of this piece seems to be working from the assumption that Jews are a completely different species from the rest of humankind, which is completely ludicrous, so I doubt there actually is any intelligence underlying his statements.