Anybody ever read a book called "None Dare Call it Conspiracy?"

It's pretty thorough, but it was published in 1971. Lots of detail about the cabal and its power structure, names names and all.

Here's a link to it for free online:
http://www.amarilloteaparty.net/uploads/none-dare-call-it-conspiracy.pdf

Excerpt:
However, the most effective weapons used against the conspiratorial theory of history are
ridicule and satire. These extremely potent weapons can be cleverly used to avoid any
honest attempt at refuting the facts. After all, nobody likes to be made fun of. Rather than
be ridiculed most people will keep quiet; and, this subject certainly does lend itself to
ridicule and satire. One technique which can be used is to expand the conspiracy to the
extent it becomes absurd. For instance, our man from the Halls of Poison Ivy might say in
a scoffingly arrogant tone, "I suppose you believe every liberal professor gets a telegram
each morning from conspiracy headquarters containing his orders for the day's
brainwashing of his students?" Some conspiratorialists do indeed overdraw the picture by
expanding the conspiracy (from the small clique which it is) to include every local kneejerk liberal activist and government bureaucrat. Or, because of racial or religious bigotry,
they will take small fragments of legitimate evidence and expand them into a conclusion
that will support their particular prejudice, i.e., the conspiracy is totally "Jewish,"
"Catholic," or "Masonic". These people do not help to expose the conspiracy, but, sadly
play into the hands of those who want the public to believe that all conspiratorialists are
screwballs.