Never heard of any colleague who had issues publishing stuff relating to intelligence, which makes me suspect that the "free of prejudices against this kind of research" bit is maybe a lie. I mean this in the sense that it might be not prejudice but rather just plain old judice, i.e. peer review that prevents edgelords from publishing.
Was curious why you didn't just link directly but then I saw the big Genetics/Human Biodiversity/Fertility Decline/Biotech block on Aporia's front page. I guess at least they're not hiding it.
On one hand giving these people the veneer of science is actively going to undermine public confidence in "science" as a whole and directly make the world a worse place.
First, Kanazawa’s (2008) computations of geographic distance used Pythagoras’ theorem and so the paper assumed that the earth is flat (Gelade, 2008). Second, these computations imply that ancestors of indigenous populations of, say, South America traveled direct routes across the Atlantic rather than via Eurasia and the Bering Strait.