bk1111 wrote:Hi, I eliminated C because it said "it is possible" ...and not a very strong answer choice. Is this a good enough reason to eliminate? Can someone please explain to me why it doesn't serve to be the best answer here?
Answer choice (C) doesn't strengthen the argument because it adds nothing new or useful to the argument. The crux of the argument is that if people walk instead of drive wherever possible, pollution from cars would be greatly reduced. Answer choice (C) tells us that the impact on pollution on an individual-by-individual basis will vary depending on what kind of car the individual drives -- so a person who walks to work instead of driving an SUV will have prevented more pollution than a person who walks to work instead of driving his hybrid.
Either way, a person who opts to walk instead of drive decreases pollution. This really does nothing to make the overall conclusion stronger -- that if everyone drove less, there would be less pollution.
Contrast this with answer choice (B), which gives us a new datapoint to work with. We already know that when a person walks instead of drives, they benefit the environment since their car won't produce pollution during their commute. However, (B) tells us that with fewer cars on the road, even the people who
still drive will produce less pollution. This is a new datapoint that makes the argument stronger.
I hope that makes sense. Good luck studying!