The last link in your post admits they don’t know his LSAT score, but assume it is the average of all Harvard Law students! From that flimsy starting point, the conclude that he could qualify for MENSA.
My husband and son qualify for Mensa. Qualifying for Mensa doesn’t mean much. You can be smart and be a terrible leader and have terrible stances on issues.
That LSAT to MENSA leap is shameful.
He was editor of the Law Review and graduated magna cum laude. I don't know if that qualifies him for Mensa, but clearly he's easily smart enough to be dangerous.
If Harvard has the same requirements for AA's as Princeton does, it's 3.5 gpa or a mid B. I took Mensa's test and it said I could "probably" join with a 140. (I doubt it, I have very little secondary education).
Affirmative Action might get him in a good school, but it doesn't make him smart.