Alicia Allen

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Later, Berkeley psychologist Arthur Jensen, Harvard psychologist Richard Herrnstein, and Nobel laureate William Shockley, a Stanford physicist, argued that since genes determined intelligence and intelligence determined social achievement, racial inequality resulted from blacks’ cognitive inferiority. The combination of black people’s lower IQ scores and higher birth rates, they warned, rendered public programs not only futile for improving blacks’ socioeconomic status but a threat to the nation’s welfare.
Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-create Race in the Twenty-First Century
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