mjb514 wrote:Can you please explain why A is wrong, thank you.
Sure, I can sympathize since I sometimes have trouble identifying correlation/causation. The reason why A is wrong in this instance is that there are no two elements with a correlation relationship (A tends to increase with B, etc.) in the stimulus, and there is certainly no causal language (A influences B, A causes B, etc.).
The only support for the conclusion is the conditional statement indicated by the "everyone who," which is a sufficient indicator. Every, everyone, everything, all, any and each are sufficient indicators. The conclusion mistakenly takes the T-shirt as the sufficient indicator. This is called a mistaken reversal.
I'd recommend searching various forums for correlation/causation indicators. It makes it a heck of a lot easier to identify those relationships when they appear.