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Re: In the vast majority of cases, when people are stopped by airport secu [#permalink]
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Aha! Thanks for that correction, sir. I see now how A would be far better, given the right wording.

-tommy
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In the vast majority of cases, when people are stopped by airport secu [#permalink]
TommyWallach wrote:
Hey All,

Just wanted to put my two cents in. I agree that the correct answer to this question ought to be C. Answer choice A confuses higher sensitivity and lower sensitivity. The question is whether or not LOWERING the sensitivity of the apparatus will have an effect, either through annoying passengers or failing to locate weapons. Answer choice A says that if the machine is set to HIGHER sensitivity, it won't pick up on rivets and such. Not only does this not make any sense (why would higher sensitivity NOT pick up those things?). It seems to me this question was perhaps copied incorrectly (here on the message board), and "higher" should be "lower". Answer choice C directly relates to the conclusion. OBVIOUSLY lowering the sensitivity will mean the machine picks up on fewer small objects, so we don't need our strengthen answer to address that. We just want to make sure it ALSO doesn't hamper the security abilities of the machine. Answer choice C tells us that this is the case.

Hope that helps!

Tommy Wallach

Yes I second C too. The desired efforts include 2 aspects: (1) reduce the frequency with which innocent people are stopped, (2) don’t hamper the scrutiny ability for weapons. Choice A and C just mention one of the 2 aspects respectively. But A seems to repeat the premise and not offer new evidence to strengthen the desired effort, so I think C is better than A.
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In the vast majority of cases, when people are stopped by airport secu [#permalink]
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