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Despite Jews being a tiny minority compared to Muslims, their perceived outsized influence ('punching above their weight') in Western finance and politics makes them a more prominent target for conspiracy theories. This demonstrates that a group's perceived effect on an individual's life is more influential than their raw numbers.

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The tendency to blame a single entity for disparate negative events isn't about logic but about satisfying a deep psychological need for order and control. This "derangement syndrome" provides a simple, pre-made narrative that assigns blame and creates a sense of understanding, regardless of evidence.

Persecution of successful minority groups often arises during economic hardship. The majority stops seeing the group's success as a result of skill or community focus and instead frames it as a zero-sum game where the minority is 'taking from us,' fueling resentment and justifying aggression.

Even if only 5% of a group is radicalized, the inability to identify them makes the entire group a security risk. This is analogous to a jar of 100 candies where 5 are poisoned; you wouldn't risk eating any of them.

People naturally attribute successes to their own merits and failures to external forces. Historically successful groups, like the Jewish people, become a convenient external target to blame for personal and societal problems, from a failed business to shark attacks. This psychological bias provides a simple explanation for complex failures.

Unlike other forms of bigotry focused on exclusion, antisemitism often includes a belief in a global conspiracy by Jewish people, which is then used to justify violence against them as a necessary counter-action.

The public sentiment towards minority groups, particularly historical scapegoats, can function as a canary in the coal mine for a nation's economic health. When fear and economic anxiety rise, society seeks a focus for its anger, making the "temperature on the Jews" a critical, if grim, socio-economic indicator.

Studies show Yankees fans perceive Boston's Fenway Park as physically closer than it is, and people threatened by immigration see Mexico City as closer. This demonstrates that psychological threats from out-groups can warp our fundamental perception of distance.

Antisemitism is psychologically distinct from other bigotries because it is rooted in resentment and envy of Jewish virtues and successes. Antisemites don't misunderstand Jews; in a sense, they understand them 'all too well' and resent their counter-cultural ideas that lead to success.

Historically, when economic systems create vast inequality (a "K-shaped economy"), populations seek scapegoats. Because Jewish communities often excelled in finance, they become an easy target, conflating systemic economic failure with the people managing the system.

Unlike other forms of bigotry focused on discrimination against customs or lifestyles, antisemitism is framed as a response to a perceived global conspiracy. This dangerous distinction is used to legitimize and create cloud cover for offensive violence against Jewish people worldwide, not just sequestration.