Wednesday, March 4, 2026

The Dark Side of JewBu Albert Einstein

Did scientist and mathematician Einstein really praise Buddhism as the way of the future?


The dark side of Albert Einstein

If incest is good enough for the Rothschilds
Jewish (possible JewBu) Albert Einstein is regarded as one of the greatest physicists of all time, but he has also become a pop culture icon.
 
Alby's groundbreaking theory of special relativity turned him into one of the most important figures in history.

Icon like MaryMarilyn, Elvis, Dolly, MartinGidget, Bruce?

You and Freud both like the Buddha.
Though, just like with other famous and eccentric personalities, there are real facts mixed with myths that survive to this day. Is he another Ashkenazi Jew guilty of incest? Or was he a crossdresser who married himself?

Having married his manly looking cousin, who grew to look more and more exactly like him, does not bolster his case for good judgment. But she may have been instrumental in his fame and his math.

I should be the icon! It's sexism and bias!
Suburban Lawns' sexy Einstein A-bomb song

Has the next Einstein already been born? - Yes
In this gallery let's debunk some of the myths and bring a number of surprising facts about Al that most have probably never heard. Browse through and learn more about the supposed genius that was Dr. Einstein (who had no doctoral degree of any kind). More: msn.com

There are two Einsteins, aren't there? Not Mr. and Mrs., but rather like Jesus (Yeshua) the real person and the pop icon (Christ). Reza Aslan was emphatic about this distinction. Everyone knows about the popular fantasy, and very few bother to learn about a possible historical figure in the context of his cultural milieu.

Old Einstein loved a good joke: my driver


Seeing Into the Life of Things
During the historic dialogue between rabbis and the Dalai Lama, as told in his international bestseller The Jew in the Lotus, Rodger Kamenetz heard a penetrating question to the rabbis: "How does your spiritual practice purify afflictive emotions?"

To Kamenetz, this seemed the most fundamental question to ask of any religion or philosophy of life. How do your practices help you with negative emotions like anxiety, envy, resentment, and shame?

You support our cause, right Mr. Lama?
Taking the listener with him on an exhilarating intellectual and emotional journey, he finds a natural spiritual path in the imagination. Kamenetz connects daily life to spiritual longing, from the musical rhythms of his beloved New Orleans to his tender bond with Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, visionary founder of Jewish Renewal and a central figure in the Dharamsala, India (where the Dalai Lama lives in exile), dialogue.

China says I'm [a] Devil. Wrathful spirit?
Embedded in a rich poetic narrative, Seeing Into the Life of Things: Imagination and the Sacred Encounter offers down to earth practices from "count your blessings," to savoring perception, from dwelling on powerful memories, to the sacred encounters in dreams.

Kamenetz shows how giving birth to our images restores us to an imagination of the sacred.
  • #AlbertEinstein #Buddha #Zen #shorts #Buddhism
  • Shauna Schwartz, Sheldon S., Seth Auberon, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

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