- Fri Jan 21, 2011 12:00 am
#22693
Complete Question Explanation
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus points out something that many of us already know: celebrities often get lighter sentences than non-celebrities for the same crimes. In fact, many people – especially people who want to go to law school – have strong opinions about whether this makes sense or not. This is a trap! We need to answer based only on the stimulus, not on our opinion.
Answer Choice (A) goes too far. It may be that there are only a few types of cases where the principle is not rigorously applied – the types of cases that celebrities are involved in. In all the other types of case, it is applied equally.
Answer Choice (B) makes a numerical fallacy: There are far more non-celebrities than celebrities, so we should not expect the numbers to be equal. In fact, there are probably fewer celebrities, both law-abiding and law-breaking, than there are non-celebrities in community service.
Answer Choice (C) relies on what some people may think about the issue, not on the stimulus: It may be that there are overriding principles. But, there may not be overriding principles – it could be that some courts are improperly ignoring the principle. The stimulus does not lead us to believe either way:
Answer Choice (D): This is the correct answer choice: if everybody is equal before the law, then celebrities should not get better treatment than non-celebrities. But, they do get better treatment. As a result, the principle has been violated.
Answer Choice (E), like (A), goes too far: it is possible to be lenient in sentencing, as long as it is done equally.
Must Be True. The correct answer choice is (D)
This stimulus points out something that many of us already know: celebrities often get lighter sentences than non-celebrities for the same crimes. In fact, many people – especially people who want to go to law school – have strong opinions about whether this makes sense or not. This is a trap! We need to answer based only on the stimulus, not on our opinion.
Answer Choice (A) goes too far. It may be that there are only a few types of cases where the principle is not rigorously applied – the types of cases that celebrities are involved in. In all the other types of case, it is applied equally.
Answer Choice (B) makes a numerical fallacy: There are far more non-celebrities than celebrities, so we should not expect the numbers to be equal. In fact, there are probably fewer celebrities, both law-abiding and law-breaking, than there are non-celebrities in community service.
Answer Choice (C) relies on what some people may think about the issue, not on the stimulus: It may be that there are overriding principles. But, there may not be overriding principles – it could be that some courts are improperly ignoring the principle. The stimulus does not lead us to believe either way:
Answer Choice (D): This is the correct answer choice: if everybody is equal before the law, then celebrities should not get better treatment than non-celebrities. But, they do get better treatment. As a result, the principle has been violated.
Answer Choice (E), like (A), goes too far: it is possible to be lenient in sentencing, as long as it is done equally.