Thomas Sowell is a great scholar, but he's deeply misguided if he thinks Jew-hatred is linked to economic success.
Jews have always been demonized, persecuted, and murdered — when they were rich and when they were poor, when they were strong and when they were weak, when they were confined to ghettos and when they were emancipated. They were lynched and expelled by Christians and by Muslims, by communists and by fascists, by illiterate peasants and by Nobel laureates, by pagans in antiquity and by atheists in our time.
During the many centuries when Jews had no state of their own, antisemites routinely turned on them with unspeakable cruelty and poisonous lies. Now there is again a Jewish state — and the cruelty and lies of the Jew-haters rages as fiercely as ever.
What accounts for such unremitting hostility against such a tiny sliver of mankind? Not money or politics or territory. The Jewish people provokes such rage because their existence is a constant reminder that there is one God who created all of humanity, and that God expects people to hold themselves to a higher a standard. It is the oldest, most unwelcome message in history.
Many Jews don't know this. But the worst antisemites in history always have. Adolf Hitler said: "Conscience is a Jewish invention. It is a blemish like circumcision."
That is the root of Jew-hatred; everything else is pretext.
A Jewish organisation asked Thomas Sowell what Jews could do to minimise the venomous hatred they face around the world. His answer was one word.