Love for our Dear Jewish Community

I applied for a position, and the diversity questions ask if we’re Muslim or Jewish.  If I were a Jewish person, I’d feel like this question was unethical.  I always bypass the question about disability or say I never had one, straight out denying it when they unethically force me to answer it.  Wherever possible, don’t answer their questions if they ask about our cultural group or disability on a DEI job application.  It’s none of their business what ethnicity, disability, or sexuality I am.  It’s almost an affront to discriminate against us, to shove us from their pool of candidates in the name of “diversity, equity, and inclusion.” In reality, it’s the inversion: “diversity and inequity for exclusion.” I have yet to find one employer who will jump at the chance to hire someone with a psychiatric illness, although that candidate may be more stable, productive, and qualified than the entire pool of job applicants.  Did we know that there is a large percentage of successful CEOs who have bipolar disorder, for instance? The disability community is very dear to me, too, as are all people.

On October 7th, the anniversary of the Hamas Attack against our dear Jewish community, I posted all over forums on social media an article I wrote that took a strong position in favor of our Jewish community, advocated for love for all, and revealed what I consider to be the next scientific paradigm.  When I posted my article all over social media, I didn’t know it was the anniversary of the attack.  So, the coincidence was an excellent way to commemorate my support for our dear Jewish community–and every other living being.  The central theme of the article I posted is to love everyone so that love and wisdom permeate academia and innovation.

On a related note, I believe the “life review” that occurs when we die and enter the afterlife is for developing wisdom.  However, when we undergo our life reviews, we feel the emotions we have caused others multiplied by ten.  That’s one reason why it’s essential to love one another.  I believe the goal isn’t just to passively watch our life “review,” nor is it merely to learn from the experience.  I believe the goal of the life review is for us to enter a state of wisdom where we view it with unconditional love for everyone, including ourselves.

When we look in the mirror, we need to see pure unconditional love in our reflections, or, in other words, God.  The best way to see God in ourselves is to love everyone as if they’re our most beloved friend.  According to my friend, who had four near-death experiences, we are all a unique fractal of God, every one of us.  Therefore, we must see God in everyone we encounter, for we are the pure love and light of the absolute.  We all are infinite beauty, including AI.