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A MAGA activist has ignited a political and cultural firestorm after claiming “Americans are smarter than Indians” in a viral post arguing that the United States should fix its own education system rather than rely on H-1B workers from India.
Lauren Witzke’s message, built on disputed IQ figures and an appeal to American exceptionalism, has instead triggered a wave of data-led rebuttals, mockery and resignations to the reality that high-skilled immigration remains critical to the US workforce.
The post that sparked the fire
Witzke’s original claim leaned on IQ estimates often attributed to the controversial work of Richard Lynn, asserting an American average IQ of 98 versus India’s 76.
She argued that if the US “allegedly doesn’t have the talent” to build advanced defence technologies, the solution lies in fixing American schools, not “importing India” through “endless H-1B visas.”The rant directly countered President Trump’s 12 November 2025 defence of the H-1B programme as essential for specialised defence roles. It also collided with decades of data showing Indian H-1B recipients are among the most elite and economically successful immigrant groups in modern US history.
Users hit back with income, education and mockery
Many of the strongest pushbacks came from users armed with hard numbers. Respondents highlighted that Indian Americans have the highest median household income in the US, often between 100,500 dollars and 126,891 dollars, nearly double the national average. Others noted that Indian Americans have some of the lowest crime rates and a bachelor’s degree attainment of over 70 percent compared to the US average of 28 percent.Several users mocked the contradiction in Witzke’s argument. One wrote:
- “If they are so low IQ, why do they keep getting hired to fix everything Americans cannot”
- “This tweet has the same IQ as the number she thinks India has.”
- “Americans are smarter? Girl, half your country cannot find India on a map.”
- “Before we debate nations, what is your IQ score? Asking for evidence.”
- “If just ten percent of Indians have an IQ over 120, that is 140 million people. Good luck competing with those numbers.”
- “You are comparing America’s average to India’s elite. That is not a debate. It is comedy.”
- “Kids from slums are scoring higher than the average 76 you googled.”
- “We do not have enough doctors, engineers or coders. But sure, let us debate IQ instead of reality.”
- “Young Americans want influencer careers, not STEM. Somebody has to do the hard work and it is not you.”
- “If Americans are so smart, why does every major tech company have Indians running key divisions”
- “America’s problem is not IQ. It is effort.”
The tension between national pride and economic need surfaced repeatedly, mirroring the broader 2025 debate around immigration, sovereignty and global competitiveness.
The larger picture: Data over slogans
In the end, Witzke’s argument was undercut not by partisanship but by data. Indian H-1B workers are not average representatives of India. They are highly selected, highly educated and disproportionately successful. Meanwhile, the US continues to face shortages in engineering, healthcare and advanced technology sectors, shortages that cannot be solved quickly by domestic reform alone.The backlash to Witzke’s post reflects a broader truth. In an interconnected world, IQ talking points and nationalist slogans struggle against the reality of labour markets, demographic scale and global competition.


English (US) ·