Anonymous wrote:
Ron:
My apologies for not writing the answer I picked. I chose (c), as I thought this gives a situation which might justify the use of intrusion by democracies. I was not
too sure about the word 'haphazardly' in the choice, but still picked this one.
thanks.
RPurewal wrote:
you have a point.
i'm more than a bit surprised that you didn't provide the answer to the question i'm about to ask, but:
...what answer did you pick after all that deliberation? and why?
your answer to this question is key. it's one thing to nitpick answers to questions - i can recall quite a few official questions in which i had at least minor issues with all 5 answer choices - but it's quite another to say that the best answer choice (which can sometimes indeed be the choice with the fewest problems!) is no longer the best answer choice.
if your complaint is 'there are minor issues with choice a', then you're probably right.
if your complaint is 'choice a is inferior to choice ___', though, then speak your piece!
choice c is irrelevant to the argument.
the argument focuses solely on the relationship between
protective measures (against surveillance / intrusions of privacy) and suppression of dissent. choice c simply states that suppression of dissent has occurred (during wartime - an irrelevant qualifier), and makes no connection whatsoever between said suppression and the presence/absence of protective measures.
--
note your use of the words 'might justify'. that's bad. really bad.
in general, you should make no assuptions whatsoever - let alone great big whopping assumptions / logical leaps. you own words - '
might justify' indicate that you are well aware that you're going far beyond the purview of the argument.