
Greg Smith was born in 1989 and is now 31 years old. You would not believe that this is the room of a ten year old boy. Greg could tell the history of the dinosaurs when he was two years only.

This genius child, Greg Smith, started college when he was only 10years old. In one year, he went from second grade to eight grade and he flew through high school in just 22 months. When he was six, he was already smarter than his own parents and they knew it. This may be really funny and hard to believe but he was only 18 months old when he started adding and subtracting. First, he was only a baby in diapers when he started correcting people's grammar. Greg’s strong feelings on non-violence and human rights for children has mushroomed into a philanthropic foundation called International Youth Advocates.Of course, everyone does not have the same IQ level so don't think that this boy's life is impossible. He abhors the thought of animals in pain. In addition to his vegetarianism, Greg has a rigid moral code: He walks out of a movie at the third curse word because he considers profanity verbal violence when a film in class contains nudity or sex, he puts his hands over his eyes or leaves the room when his family rents movies, Greg vetoes anything rated PG-13 because he is only 12. Greg, now 12, is a college senior at Randolph-Macon College in Ashland Virginia. He persuaded his family to become vegetarians. He observed that people had flat teeth, like plant-eating dinosaurs, and concluded that human beings must be herbivores, not carnivores. He solved arithmetic problems at 14 months and at two he was reading about dinosaurs and chatting knowledgeably about the Cretaceous Period.

He could recite memorized books before his first birthday and read on his own shortly after.

His IQ is “off the chart.” According to parents Bob and Janet Smith, Greg began speaking simple words at three months old and full sentences quickly followed. ASHLAND, VIRGINIA, JANUARY 8, 2002: Boy genius Gregory Smith finished high school in two years with an A+ average.
