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View Full Version : Mensa Marvel: Two-Year-Old Girl's 156 IQ



Loki
03-17-2013, 01:23 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z1mhx42dGxo

Armand_Duval
03-17-2013, 01:31 AM
And she is black?..... i thought blacks were stupid.....:joke0001:

Herr Abubu
03-17-2013, 01:37 AM
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't her IQ score only valid in terms of how she compares to people of her age?

Loki
03-17-2013, 01:41 AM
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't her IQ score only valid in terms of how she compares to people of her age?

Yes, of course.

larali
03-17-2013, 01:46 AM
My kid could have gotten in Mensa, but I wouldn't want to do that to her ;)

mr. logan
03-17-2013, 01:46 AM
Chinoid repeating data. :)

Graham
03-17-2013, 01:50 AM
Should get the best teachers available, to fulfill potential.

StonyArabia
03-19-2013, 02:28 AM
And she is black?..... i thought blacks were stupid.....:joke0001:

Intelligence can never be racialized that's the plain truth. It's also a very abstract method and differs from one culture to one culture.

Armand_Duval
03-19-2013, 03:49 AM
It is funny because the word Mensa means dumb woman in spanish, what kind of dumb ass parents name their baby gal Mensa??.

EagleAtHeart
03-19-2013, 06:26 AM
And she is black?..... i thought blacks were stupid.....:joke0001:

They are.

This is just a Liberal PR stunt.

A 2 year old can memorize a few capital cities so they're geniuses? LOL

EagleAtHeart
03-19-2013, 06:32 AM
Anywho, apparently she was "granted" a MENSA membership because of her media appearances.

A Black/Asian kid in Briton with xenophobia on the rise.

The test she also did was tailored to her. I.E. it was rigged and she was probably coached on, like in that interview.

Liberals have zero honor!

StonyArabia
03-23-2013, 05:43 PM
Anywho, apparently she was "granted" a MENSA membership because of her media appearances.

A Black/Asian kid in Briton with xenophobia on the rise.

The test she also did was tailored to her. I.E. it was rigged and she was probably coached on, like in that interview.

Liberals have zero honor!

LOL, there many Blacks who are successful and have been positive and innovative like anyone else:


For example African American inventor Henry Sampson is a brilliant and accomplished nuclear physicist who invented a Gamma-Electrical Cell. Henry Sampson's patent (US 3,591,860) can be viewed in its entirety online or in person at the United States Patent and Trademark Office. View Portions of the patent below.

Henry Sampson was born in Jackson, Mississippi. He received a Bachelor of Science degree from Purdue University in 1956. He graduated with an MS degree in engineering from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1961. Sampson also received his MS in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, in 1965, and his PHD in 1967.

Sampson was employed as a research chemical engineer at the U.S. Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, California, in the area of high energy solid propellants and case bonding materials for solid rocket motors. Henry Sampson also served as the Director of Mission Development and Operations of the Space Test Program at the Aerospace Corporation in El Segundo, California.

Henry Sampson also received patents for a "binder system for propellants and explosives" and a "case bonding system for cast composite propellants." Both inventions are related to solid rocket motors.

Neil deGrasse Tyson (pron.: /ˈniːəl dəˈɡręs ˈtaɪsən/ born October 5, 1958) is an American astrophysicist and science communicator. He is currently the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the Rose Center for Earth and Space and a research associate in the department of astrophysics at the American Museum of Natural History. From 2006 to 2011 he hosted the educational science television show NOVA ScienceNow on PBS and has been a frequent guest on The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, Real Time with Bill Maher, and Jeopardy!. It was announced on August 5, 2011, that Tyson will be hosting a new sequel to Carl Sagan's Cosmos: A Personal Voyage television series.[2]

Keith L. Black (born September 13, 1957) is an American neurosurgeon specializing in the treatment of brain tumors and a prolific campaigner for funding of cancer treatment. He is chairman of the neurosurgery department and director of the Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, California.

After serving his internship and residency at the University of Michigan, in 1987 he moved to the UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles,[ where he later became head of UCLA's Comprehensive Brain Tumor Program. In 1997, after 10 years at UCLA, he moved to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center to head the Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute. He was also on the faculty of the University of California, Irvine School of Medicine from 1998 to 2003.[4][8] In 2007 he opened the new Johnnie L. Cochran Jr. Brain Tumor Center at Cedars-Sinai, a research center named after the famous lawyer who had been Black's patient and supporter.[9][10]

Black has been a frequent subject of media reports on medical advances in neurosurgery. He was featured in a 1996 episode of the PBS program The New Explorers entitled "Outsmarting the Brain". Esquire included him in its November 1999 "Genius Issue" as one of the "21 Most Important People of the 21st Century." He has been cited as an expert in reports about whether mobile phone use affects the incidence of brain tumors. He is also noted for his very busy surgery schedule: a 2004 Discover article noted that he performs about 250 brain surgeries per year, and that at age 46 he had "already performed more than 4,000 brain surgeries, the medical equivalent of closing in on baseball’s all-time career hits record." (As of 2009, Black's surgery count had risen to "more than 5,000 operations for resection of brain tumors".

In 1997, Time magazine featured Black on the cover of a special edition called "Heroes of Medicine". The accompanying article described Black's reputation as a surgeon who would operate on tumors that other doctors would not, as well as aspects of his medical research, including his discovery that the peptide bradykinin can be effective in opening the blood–brain barrier.

In 2009 Black published his autobiography, co-authored with Arnold Mann, entitled Brain Surgeon. New York Times reviewer Abigail Zuger described the book as a "fascinating, if somewhat stilted, memoir". The Publishers Weekly review commented that the book "examines racial hurdles he had to leap to become a neurosurgeon" and "alternat[es] incisive writing about incisions with his personal memoir, insightful and inspirational."

Of course to a racist, this does not matter, and fact that shatters their idiotic believes, and shows that intelligence is not racialized as they want us to believe, and has often been rejected and debunked so many times. Those are just examples and they are more.