'Conspiracy theories are one of the most successful defenders of capital, b/c they displace systemic injustices onto a single [supposedly] corrupt individual.' In opening, Burley brings characteristic next-level insight to what might otherwise threaten to be a banal set of half-statements. Declines towards end. Latter portion deals largely with anti-semitism; seems to be halfway trying to offer evidence that 'all conspiracy theories boil down to anti-semitic roots.' Brief historical description of European Jewish refugees entering US, subsequent 'class-hopping.' That aside, little new material - largely half-baked convo.