Following Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw of Columbia Law School

Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, Center for Intersectionality & Social Policy Studies Columbia University Law School, NYC Wikipedia, Articles, Books Homepage(s): UCLA, Videos,

In 1989 Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw introduced a legal term, intersectionality, as a black, female law professor (now at Columbia). She was seeking to define an area where race, class, gender, and other more specific individual characteristics (like a disability) actually intersect with one another. That overlap, intersectionality, didn’t take too many years before it would be used to broaden the scope of DEI.”

First email: 14 November 2023 at 10 AM

Dear Prof. Dr. Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw,

I believe that there is a weakness within the ESG-DEI intellectual foundations and have written about it here: https://81018.com/esg-dei/. Within the DEI analysis, your work on intersectionality defines the history and creates her initial foundations. Notwithstanding, I wonder if we might be able to go further. My proposal is to add a ground wire to every DEI proposal or placement. Net-net, DEI’s intersectionality would take on the dimensionality of continuity, symmetry, and harmony, all qualitative aspects of infinity that condition and flavor all aspects of the finite. Those three concepts are defined by pi(π) and are used in our most basic scientific principles (and laws).

Continuity-symmetry-harmony are the intersectional qualities where race, gender, class, and our other unique characteristics, begin to commingle and build character and our individual personality that transcends it all.

My page for my analysis of your work is here: https://81018.com/crenshaw/ (this page)

Thank you for all your work. As a street beggar (and you the creator of intersectionality), would you ever entertain writing an article with me?

Again, thanks for all that you do to make our world (and universe) a better place.

Warmly,

Bruce

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