Keep in mind IQ is one of many forms of Intelligence. I believe there are 6 or so in total. I think people with higher IQ tend to score lower in other intelligences.
4 days ago | 6
Tracks with me 🤷🏾♀️ White partner, high IQ (college degree - now I work in tech). I’ve only dated 1 really smart black guy and he was still a dusty
4 days ago | 4
This study is complete propaganda, it's NOT PEER REVIEWED, the statistical methods are unsound, the framing reflects researcher bias it also says black men with higher IQ date out lol, as well as lower iq WM dating BW vs those with WW. Believing this or not is an IQ test in and of itself. This type of slop is more readily being called out nowadays and should not be taken seriously.
3 days ago (edited) | 3
The Pink Pill
Don't get made at me but look at these numbers. Black women married to white men have higher IQ's than the other way around. You heard it here first so give credit where it is due. ETA: Just tracked the data and it came from @Lauren Chen on X. I just asked grok:
Any speculation why black women who are with white male partners have a higher iq?
"Based on the table you shared, Black women with White male partners have an average IQ of 94.9 (sample size 43, p < .001), which is higher than the 85.0 for Black women with Black partners (sample size 1,113). There’s no direct evidence in the data to explain this, but here are some plausible speculations:Selection Bias: Black women with higher IQs might be more likely to form relationships with White men, possibly due to social, educational, or economic opportunities that align with higher cognitive ability. This could reflect self-selection rather than a causal effect.
Environmental Factors: Being in a relationship with a White partner might correlate with exposure to different social or cultural environments (e.g., better education or resources), which could influence IQ scores.
Small Sample Size: The sample of 43 is much smaller than 1,113, so the higher average could be skewed by a few individuals with above-average IQs.
These are just hypotheses— the data doesn’t prove any cause. Rushton and Jensen’s 2005 review suggests IQ differences may have genetic and environmental roots, but it doesn’t address partner dynamics specifically. More research with larger, controlled samples would be needed to explore this further. "
4 days ago (edited) | [YT] | 84