Well said. JK.
To answer Colton's question, didn't the article say that they measured average IQ of a random sample of both groups? The article is not surprising at all. It's very hard to argue that atheism and education bear no correlation. It obviously does. And education is very closely linked to IQ scores. So this whole thing is not surprising.
As for Franklin's comment, only a minority of Jews, in general, actually practice the religion, or possess any deep faith. Most are culturally Jewish. That is even more obvious when it comes to the intellectual Jewish clique. But then again, what percentage of biologists or physicists are believers? 5%? Some people manage to have religious faith, while maintaining their scientific objectivity. But it's somewhat difficult.
The nonsensical idea that intelligent people become atheist is just that; nonsense. But access to knowledge does liberalize religious thought in almost every instance.