- Thu Apr 13, 2017 6:54 pm
#34091
You're on the right track, LAM, but even if we were to flip that conditional claim around it would still be a loser answer. Why? Because nowehere in the stimulus do we have any indication that right-side steering wheels do anything to "meet the needs of Japanese buyers". Who said they need that, just because they drive on the left? Maybe it isn't about needs, but about wants? Don't assume any new, unnecessary information, LAM, like this whole "meet the needs" concept brought up in this answer choice. Instead, stick to what we know, which is only about which side the Japanese drive on and which side the steering wheels are on in the various cars being sold there.
Assumption answers can sometimes seem blindingly obvious, even "too simple to be right", but don't let that deter you, because obvious answers are very often assumptions of an argument. If I argue that Guardians of the Galaxy Part II will be a better movie than the original Guardians movie, I have to assume that Part II is, in fact, a movie, right? And I have to assume that there was, in fact, an original Guardians movie, too, don't I? Those both seem pretty obvious, but they are assumptions of my claim nonetheless. How do I know? Try negating them: Guardians Part II is a book, not a movie (so it cannot be a better movie); there was no "original" Guardians movie (so there is no way that Part II can be a better movie, because "better" requires a comparison to something).
Keep on building up your armor to protect that Achilles' heel of yours, and you'll be ready for battle with the LSAT soon. That Assumption breakthrough is right around the corner, I can feel it!
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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