- Mon Nov 11, 2019 2:37 pm
#71893
Hi Kyle,
Very nice job on this question, and you did indeed arrive at the correct answer!
To your more general question, you should be thinking this deeply about all the LR questions, but there are certain elements of the process you could streamline. For example, we have to be careful about getting too specific with a Weaken (or Strengthen) question prephrase, because there are often many ways to weaken and strengthen the short arguments on the LR section.
Here, you could begin by ID'ing the conclusion (as you've done), but making your prephrase simpler: you're looking for an answer choice that runs against the notion that the best way to increase blood supply is to encourage more donations by regular blood donors. Answer choice E goes straight at the conclusion (and while it doesn't entirely bypass the "relevant difference" aspect you prephrased, it also doesn't obviously highlight the issue as a "relevant difference"): in Pulaski, we can't increase the frequency of the donations of regular blood donors (because they're maxed out already), so the strategy can't even get off the ground. Using the simpler prephrase might allow a quicker process of getting through the answer choices (keeping any contenders, but after a quick trip through the answers, arriving at what is clearly the strongest and best answer, answer choice E).
Continue thinking this deeply about every LR question! The process ultimately will come faster to you. It's a matter of repetition and exposure--don't give up on it just because it seems somewhat cumbersome right now!
I hope this helps!
Jeremy
Jeremy Press
LSAT Instructor and law school admissions consultant