>>12756402Most of their "contributions" were only made during the modern era, when they were able to infiltrate Western institutions with nepotism and take credit for the achievements of others. There's a reason that there are very few noteworthy Jewish scientists before 1900, and it's not because they were somehow "excluded" from the scientific community (most pre-modern discoveries were made by individuals anyhow).
As for Einstein, he was a patent clerk who had one inexplicable miracle year where he "built off of" the ideas of Hilbert, Poincare, and Lorentz, and then did little of note for the rest of his life. You do the math.