- Thu May 23, 2019 4:32 pm
#64973
wwf;
(A) doesn't question a premise. The politician states that "many would agree...," and (A) points out that those many are wrong. Thus, (A) doesn't contradict the statements in the stimulus, it simply answers a question that the stimulus left open--whether those "many people" are correct.
(B) is wrong because showing that it's insufficient to be opposed to higher taxes doesn't show that it's irrelevant or unnecessary. Let's say that opposition to higher taxes is insufficient. It could still be necessary, and that would support the politician's argument. So (B) does not weaken the stimulus.
(A) doesn't question a premise. The politician states that "many would agree...," and (A) points out that those many are wrong. Thus, (A) doesn't contradict the statements in the stimulus, it simply answers a question that the stimulus left open--whether those "many people" are correct.
(B) is wrong because showing that it's insufficient to be opposed to higher taxes doesn't show that it's irrelevant or unnecessary. Let's say that opposition to higher taxes is insufficient. It could still be necessary, and that would support the politician's argument. So (B) does not weaken the stimulus.