- Tue Jan 20, 2009 12:00 am
#73696
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (A).
The stimulus begins by telling us that while many politicians promise to reduce government intrusion into the lives of voters, the politicians that actually get elected are the ones who promise to help solve their problems, which actually requires some of that intrusion, especially in the form of higher taxes. From these premises the author then concludes that over time, government intrusion into the lives of voters will continue without much reduction.
The stem asks for an answer that would strengthen the argument, so we need a new premise that makes the conclusion - continued government intrusion - seem more likely. Anything that supports that claim will suffice.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. If elected politicians keep their promises, and if we elect politicians who promise to help solve our problems, and if that can only be done by intruding in some way, such as with taxes, then it seems that our author is correct and that such intrusion will continue. Elected politicians will try to help, and in so doing will intrude on our lives. Winner!
Answer choice (B): An opposite answer, this one suggests that the politicians who were elected, who promised to try to help solve our problems, might not actually try to help. So perhaps they will not intrude on our lives after all?
Answer choice (C): The type of problems that people have is not relevant to the argument about government intrusion into the lives of voters. Money only came up as the way that intrusion might manifest itself - as taxes - and had nothing to do with what types of problems the government might try to help solve.
Answer choice (D): How burdensome the intrusion may be, or how that burden compares to the burden in non-democracies, is irrelevant to the question of whether that intrusion will continue at current levels or be reduced over time.
Answer choice (E): What politicians believe ought to be done is not important; what matters is what they promise to do and what they actually do if they are elected. This answer suggests that politicians who get elected probably don't believe they ought to do the things they promise to do, but as long as they actually do it, as in Answer A, then it makes no difference what they really believe. Their lack of belief doesn't strengthen or weaken the argument.
Strengthen. The correct answer choice is (A).
The stimulus begins by telling us that while many politicians promise to reduce government intrusion into the lives of voters, the politicians that actually get elected are the ones who promise to help solve their problems, which actually requires some of that intrusion, especially in the form of higher taxes. From these premises the author then concludes that over time, government intrusion into the lives of voters will continue without much reduction.
The stem asks for an answer that would strengthen the argument, so we need a new premise that makes the conclusion - continued government intrusion - seem more likely. Anything that supports that claim will suffice.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. If elected politicians keep their promises, and if we elect politicians who promise to help solve our problems, and if that can only be done by intruding in some way, such as with taxes, then it seems that our author is correct and that such intrusion will continue. Elected politicians will try to help, and in so doing will intrude on our lives. Winner!
Answer choice (B): An opposite answer, this one suggests that the politicians who were elected, who promised to try to help solve our problems, might not actually try to help. So perhaps they will not intrude on our lives after all?
Answer choice (C): The type of problems that people have is not relevant to the argument about government intrusion into the lives of voters. Money only came up as the way that intrusion might manifest itself - as taxes - and had nothing to do with what types of problems the government might try to help solve.
Answer choice (D): How burdensome the intrusion may be, or how that burden compares to the burden in non-democracies, is irrelevant to the question of whether that intrusion will continue at current levels or be reduced over time.
Answer choice (E): What politicians believe ought to be done is not important; what matters is what they promise to do and what they actually do if they are elected. This answer suggests that politicians who get elected probably don't believe they ought to do the things they promise to do, but as long as they actually do it, as in Answer A, then it makes no difference what they really believe. Their lack of belief doesn't strengthen or weaken the argument.