How can I re-Jew myself? - Unjewed this, unjewed that, but is this the right way forward?

Vecr

DM if I don't respond.
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Jun 24, 2019
I consider myself pretty unjewed, I even run an unjewed web browser (Unjewgled Chromium). However, with the recent situation in Israel and with various views regarding Jews in the west becoming more common, I think my niche mindset has gone lamestream. At this point, I'm looking for books by high-quality Jews on various broad topics, so I can re-Jew myself better than I have ever been.

I don't want to be standard, every day Jewed though, I want to be high-quality Jewed, so the books need to be accurate and detailed.

My history and planned future looks like this: Notice I am Jewed (complete) -> Become un-Jewed(complete) -> Realize that being un-Jewed is mainstream(complete) -> Become re-Jewed, but in a better way(in the planning stage)
 
Just remember, "If you're Jewed, you're screwed!"

You go to a restaurant, order the most expensive thing and constantly nitpick and bitch about it to get it discounted or comped. Don’t forget to constantly hock and blow your nose into a hankie every thirty seconds.

Do this all with a very nasal voice, and don't forget to mention every relative, regardless of how distant and tangential, was involved in the great shoah, which is just the most well known example of anti-semitism. Don't forget when you exclaim something that "Oy" is involved. Also, make sure that if any non-jew ever says "I understand how you feel" you say "I appreciate how you feel, but not being Jewish, you can't possibly understand the pain my people have had to endure for millennia."
 
  • Informative
Reactions: Vecr
On the unlikely chance that something serious gets posted here, I might be interested. (Just out of idle curiosity.)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Vecr
Still no book recommendations though. I want high quality Jewish authors, not writing on Judaism at least specifically.
 
Raymond Smullyan? (Though I don't know if he counts as Jewish according to your criteria, religiously he's more of a freethinker or Taoist.) Mathemetician, studied formal systems. I have a vague memory of this hilarious chapter in one of his books playing with self-reference paradoxes where a psychologist invents a machine that reliably indicates subjective experience, the machine informs the psychologist that he's mistaken about his own qualia, and the psychologist has to figure out whether to trust the device he just invented and tested or his own perceptions.

One other book by a Jewish guy that I read recently was the autobiography of Stefan Zweig, "World of Yesterday", mostly out of historical interest.
 
Last edited:
Back