- Sat Feb 01, 2014 5:02 am
#14234
In this question, I incorrectly chose answer A. Could you please explain why this answer is not correct? The council member appears to be attacking the mayor's motives, so I thought he was making a "source" flaw.
When reading the stimulus again, the council member does attack the mayor's motives. He claims that the only reason the mayor is against imposing real estate development fees is because the mayor's family is heavily involved in real estate development. While this may be true, the mayor does legitimately reason that the real estate fees would significantly reduce the number of building starts, leading to revenue loss for the city. Based upon this, is answer A only half right? Answer B is a better answer choice because it addresses that the mayor does have personal interest for not passing the fees but also has factual data (the fees will result in revenue loss for the city) to back him up.
When reading the stimulus again, the council member does attack the mayor's motives. He claims that the only reason the mayor is against imposing real estate development fees is because the mayor's family is heavily involved in real estate development. While this may be true, the mayor does legitimately reason that the real estate fees would significantly reduce the number of building starts, leading to revenue loss for the city. Based upon this, is answer A only half right? Answer B is a better answer choice because it addresses that the mayor does have personal interest for not passing the fees but also has factual data (the fees will result in revenue loss for the city) to back him up.