- "The Color          of Crime 2005" is now available online          (Adobe PDF format).
       
        - "How Racial          Preferences Backfire" is Stuart J. Taylor's summary in the          National Journal of Richard Sanders big study of the ill effects of law          school quotas. Sanders report itself can be downloaded here.          And here's an analysis          of the Texas Bar Exam results by race:
3) Do the  differences in bar exam passing rates and scores among racial/ethnic group  correspond to the differences in their admissions credentials and law school  grades?
Yes. We found that on the average, the applicants in different racial/ethnic  groups performed as well on the bar exam as would be expected on the basis of  their law school admission credentials and law school grades.
- Parapundit  on the decline of the middle class neighborhood.
- Michael  Blowhard asks, "When I look over the many comments that accumulate on  my various postings about immigration policy ... what puzzles me far more than  the question "How can anyone fail to succumb to the brilliance of my  arguments?" is another question entirely: "Why are so many Americans  so very shy about expressing their preferences?"
- Tyler Cowen's latest, and perhaps lamest, argument  for massive Hispanic immigration. In another posting, this on his  favorite things Swiss, Tyler, who is exquisitely cultured, admits,  "These days I find Paul Klee repetitive." Perhaps someday Tyler will  explain why he favors the lumpenproletarianization of American culture by a  flood of Latin Americans with 5th grade educations.
- Dennis Dale at Untethered gives  us a taste  of what "Repo Man" might have looked like if written and directed by  Marcel Proust. Then, shifting gears, he has his  way with the "Baja 500," the economists who signed that "open  letter" on immigration.
- Martin  Kelly reviews Ken Loach's Cannes-winning IRA 1922 movie "The Wind that  Blows the Barley."
- New Englanders have the best vocabularies among white people, according to the  GSS, says Half  Sigma.
- Dusk  in Autumn explains what it takes to be a good teacher.
- Genetic  Chaos reports on a DNA study that finds little evidence for the popular idea  that New Mexico's Spanish-American (i.e., pre-Mexican independence) settlers  (e.g., Linda Chavez's and Sen. Ken Salazar's Spanish-speaking ancestors arrived  in what's now the American Southwest about 400 years ago) included a sizable  crypto-Jewish element. 
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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