Jason Richwine, the co-author of a controversial immigration study released this week by the Heritage Foundation, tells Post Politics that he has resigned his position with the organization.“Yes, that’s right,” Richwine wrote in a brief e-mail. Heritage confirmed that he resigned.The study written by Richwine and Robert Rector argued that the immigration reform bill would cost $6.3 trillion, but it was widely panned by conservative groups pushing for immigration reform as not accounting for the economic benefits of immigrants.
wow an admission albeit via gaffe of racial bigotry and a few testaments on paper and he's history, if they follow this plan they would solve our problem for us, we need to expose those others who hae a like mindset, we don't need lopsided gov't the republicans prove that everyday.
Complicating matters were a series of revelations about Richwine, including that he had written a doctoral thesis at Harvard University arguing that the United States shouldfocus its immigration efforts on those with high IQs and that he had written for a Web site that describes itself as “nationalist.”
the real question is not Hispanic or Blacks IQ but more appropriate ARE REPUBLICANS SMARTER THAN 5TH GRADERS? looks like they are not.