Turning a narrow, context-bound survey finding into a broad political sorting story invites a dangerous precedent: treating measurable traits as a civic credential, which corrodes equal citizenship and fuels discrimination by implication rather than evidence. Nothing described here is likely criminal on its face, but the governance risk is normativeâmisuse of âgiftednessâ research to rationalize exclusion or stigma violates our basic commitments to political equality and individual autonomy. The facts provided also cabin the claim: a small German sample, self-reported ideology, and explicit warnings that terms and effects may not translate to the United States. If we ignore those constraints, we invite institutions and employers to infer character and loyalty from IQ labels, undermining the democratic norm that rights and legitimacy do not depend on cognitive ranking.