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 Administrator
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#31781
Please post below with any questions!
 jlam061695
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#32369
Why is the correct answer A? I didn't think that the cities were focusing solely on the "intentions"; the stimulus describes cities that were able to reverse the decay of aging cities areas through processes that encouraged renovation and revitalization. "Have reversed" indicates that it already happened, and the reversal of the decay of urban areas was the goal (and since it was achieved, it is the consequences that the cities focused on).
 Kristina Moen
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#32390
Hi jl,

This is a Strengthen/Principle question. What you are looking for is a general principle that will strengthen the conclusion in the argument, which is about a specific situation. Here, we are looking to strengthen the politician's criticism. So what is the politician's criticism?

Here, the politician's conclusion is that "Such legislation should not be commended." Why? Because the principal beneficiaries are well-to-do professionals, not the people that the programs were intended to help.

Answer choice (A) strengthens the politician's conclusion. If we should take into account actual results (beneficiaries are well-to-do professionals), not the intentions (long-term residents get help) alone, then we might have a reason to criticize the legislation.

Be careful with your reading of answer choice (A). It's not saying that the cities were focused on intentions alone. We don't know that. It's saying that we should take into account factors beyond intentions when evaluating legislation.
 jlam061695
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#32399
I understand why A is the correct answer now, thanks Kristina!
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 Jonathan Evans
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#32401
Complete Question Explanation

Strengthen (Principle). The correct answer choice is (A)

This question presents a couple possible traps for students. First, there are few "indicator" words to help find the conclusion in the middle of the stimulus. To help identify the claim accurately and quickly, it is helpful to recognize the "statement-disagreement-evidence" pattern in the stimulus. You may be familiar with this scenario in the form of the "Some experts claim eating lasagna is part of a balanced breakfast; They must be on drugs" style argument. Once we identify the conclusion that "such legislation should not be commended" (note also that this expresses an opinion), we must then be clear about what "such legislation" refers to. It is clear in the stimulus that the legislation involves giving tax credits to encourage urban renewal in certain areas.

Now that we have a clear idea what the conclusion is, we must identify the evidence provided to support this claim. The stimulus gives us two premises:
  • P1: The primary beneficiaries of this policy have been affluent investors.
    P2: The legislation was intended to help the long-term residents of these areas.
In your analysis, you should now pause to try to discern an idea why the author of this stimulus considers this policy a failure. You may note that the author seems to make a connection between the idea of whether a policy is praiseworthy with whether it achieved its goal.

Now with respect to the question, we are tasked with helping the argument by proposing a principle or rule that would bolster the author's conclusion. With your analysis in mind, you might prephrase that you are looking for an answer that makes the same connection as the author makes. In other words, you need an answer that suggests a connection between whether a policy achieves its intended goals and whether it is worthy of praise.

Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. One difficulty students may have with this answer stems from the phrase "evaluation of legislation." This idea correlates to the part of the conclusion about whether legislation "should not be commended," but students may miss this match. It is helpful to understand that an evaluation will ultimately result in a positive, neutral, or, as in this case, negative result. The second part of this answer choice makes a distinction between actual results and intentions, and this distinction describes criteria that comprise both our premises. Indeed, we have a choice here that could serve as a rule: based on the premises, we would be more likely to reach the author's conclusion. Thus, this is the correct answer.

Answer choice (B): Expressing a negative opinion about the role of wealthy community members, this choice may mislead students who assume the author also has a negative opinion about the role of wealthy community members. There are a couple problems here. First, we are unaware of any issues in the stimulus arising from the "influence" of these people. Second, in the stimulus there is no judgment about praiseworthiness of policies that benefit the affluent, only that this particular policy reached an outcome other than its intended goal. The outcome itself is not significant. Rather the fact that the outcome was not intended is the issue.

Answer choice (C): This choice makes no distinction between the outcome and the intention of the policy. Further, even should we assume this choice to be true, we would not necessarily reach the same conclusion. Perhaps the law did apply equally to everyone (we have no reason to believe otherwise). Even if this had been the case, the affluent may have ended up benefiting more from the policy.

Answer choice (D): Well, in fact, the legislation was to some people's benefit, just not the intended beneficiaries! This choice describes a principle that fails to apply whatsoever to the stimulus. That's not what happened here.

Answer choice (E): If anything, this choice weakens the claim by suggesting that laws that benefit the affluent can benefit everyone. If this were the case, then we would seem to have at least one possible reason why the legislation actually should be commended, albeit rather inconclusive.
 mo_wan
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#60180
I am having trouble with d) Legislation that is not to anyone's benefit, doesnt that mean that a legislation that doesnt benefit SOMEONE should not be commended?

Also do you have any tips for dealing with double negatives like this one?
 Brook Miscoski
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#61589
Mo Wan,

You are correct in your rephrase of D: it means that legislation that doesn't benefit someone should not be commended.

Because the legislation did benefit someone--the well-to-do--D doesn't help us argue against commendation.

The sentence did not contain a double-negative. Your rephrase, in fact, has the same number of negatives and the same logical structure as the original, your phrasing just seems more natural to you.

There are two basic double negatives:

"Ain't nobody got time for that"--these are colloquialisms with two negatives slammed right against each other. "Can't not" just means "can't." It is bad English and will not be seen on the LSAT.

"The LSAT is not unclear"--this is arguably poor expression because it would be simpler to say "The LSAT is clear."

In reprise:

What you are calling a double-negative is simply two independent negative ideas in the same sentence. You may have to spend some time on such sentences to understand how the two different ideas relate to each other. In this case, it would be arguably clearer to say "Commendation requires that someone benefit from the legislation," because what the LSAT test writers expressed is (approximately) a conditional relationship.

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