- Mon Jul 27, 2020 10:58 pm
#77499
Hi lenihil!
Answer choice (C): Based on his statements, we know that Miguel would agree with this statement. But Steven did not address drivers with blood alcohol levels above the current legal limit. So we do not know for sure what Steven would say to this. If we don't know what one speaker would say to a an answer choice, then it is incorrect. For the correct answer in a Point at Issue question, we need to know what both speakers would say.
Answer choice (D): Steven would agree with this statement because this is why he wants to lower the legal blood alcohol level. As for Miguel, we cannot be sure that he would disagree with this statement. He doesn't say that no drivers with blood alcohol levels lower than the current legal limit pose a danger to the public--just that overall this would have little effect on highway safety.
Answer choice (E): We don't really have enough evidence in the stimulus to know what either Steven or Miguel would say to this answer choice.
Remember that Point at Issue questions are in the same family as Must Be True questions. If you can't prove what a speaker would think of an answer choice based on their statements in the stimulus, then it can't be the point at issue between the speakers and you can eliminate that answer choice. For the correct answer, you must know what each speaker would say to the statement in the answer choice and you have to be able to clearly say that one of the speakers would say "Yes, I agree with that statement" and the other speaker would say "No, I disagree with that statement."
Hope this helps!
Best,
Kelsey