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suramya26
Can anybody tell me Why the answer to Q1 is A and not E?

'statements would the author most likely agree' = statement that is supported by the author.

The last line of the passage - "The media must be held accountable for their activities, just like every other significant institution in our society, and the media must be forced to earn the public‘s trust." suggests that author supports that media should be accountable.

If option E were to be true, it would mean that author supports the notion that the media is not accountable to the public. E is opposite of what the author supports.

A, on the other hand is what the author believes as per the passage.
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suramya26
Can anybody tell me Why the answer to Q1 is A and not E?

'statements would the author most likely agree' = statement that is supported by the author.

The last line of the passage - "The media must be held accountable for their activities, just like every other significant institution in our society, and the media must be forced to earn the public‘s trust." suggests that author supports that media should be accountable.

If option E were to be true, it would mean that author supports the notion that the media is not accountable to the public. E is opposite of what the author supports.

A, on the other hand is what the author believes as per the passage.

Thanks for the explanation.
But I didn't understand that If the author is saying that The media must be held accountable for their activities........
This means that presently media is not accountable. Please correct me on my reasoning.

Secondly, can you give me the reasoning behind option A?
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suramya26
Can anybody tell me Why the answer to Q1 is A and not E?

'statements would the author most likely agree' = statement that is supported by the author.

The last line of the passage - "The media must be held accountable for their activities, just like every other significant institution in our society, and the media must be forced to earn the public‘s trust." suggests that author supports that media should be accountable.

If option E were to be true, it would mean that author supports the notion that the media is not accountable to the public. E is opposite of what the author supports.

A, on the other hand is what the author believes as per the passage.

Thanks for the explanation.
But I didn't understand that If the author is saying that The media must be held accountable for their activities........
This means that presently media is not accountable. Please correct me on my reasoning.


Secondly, can you give me the reasoning behind option A?

Hi,
What you understood would be correct if the option E were - " The media is not accountable to the public currently"
Read the option as a general claim by the author. Isn't it now logically wrong without the word - 'currently' ?

Consider the following excerpt from the passage-
"It is vitally important for the leaders of the United States to know the real state of affairs internationally, and this can occur only if foreign leaders feel free to speak their minds to our diplomats. "

If the media and eventually the public is fed with wrong information , for instance, about a meeting with the secretary, the foreign leaders would not have to fear the leakage of information and would then be able to speak their minds with the diplomats for greater good of the country. Thus, feeding the public misinformation is warranted in certain situations

Hope the things are clear now.
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Can someone explain the answer of the 4th question?
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NiruSinghal
Can someone explain the answer of the 4th question?

As per below excerpt from the passage,
Until recently, it looked as if the media had convinced the public that journalists were more reliable than the government;
-which means that public always thought that the government (official) was not reliable (again it does not mean that the official was always wrong).
Hence, A and D are eliminated.
Further,
However, this may be changing. With the passage of time, the media have lost lustre. They—having grown large and powerful—provoke the same public skepticism that other large institutions in the society do. A series of media scandals has contributed to this. Many Americans have concluded that the media are no more credible than the government, and public opinion surveys reflect much ambivalence about the press.
- Which means that now the public can’t even trust media blindfolded (again this does not mean that the media is always wrong).
Hence, B is eliminated and the answer choice is C.
E is out of scope.
Hope this clarifies your doubt.
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NiruSinghal
Can someone explain the answer of the 4th question?

As per below excerpt from the passage,
Until recently, it looked as if the media had convinced the public that journalists were more reliable than the government;
-which means that public always thought that the government (official) was not reliable (again it does not mean that the official was always wrong).
Hence, A and D are eliminated.
Further,
However, this may be changing. With the passage of time, the media have lost lustre. They—having grown large and powerful—provoke the same public skepticism that other large institutions in the society do. A series of media scandals has contributed to this. Many Americans have concluded that the media are no more credible than the government, and public opinion surveys reflect much ambivalence about the press.
- Which means that now the public can’t even trust media blindfolded (again this does not mean that the media is always wrong).
Hence, B is eliminated and the answer choice is C.
E is out of scope.
Hope this clarifies your doubt.

Hi,
For option D, as you have stated, public always thought that the govt. was not reliable and with the passage of time, media lost its credibility as well. So, in nutshell in public's view both may be wrong at times. Agreed that officials are not always wrong but can be at times right?
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madvarsha14
NiruSinghal
Can someone explain the answer of the 4th question?

As per below excerpt from the passage,
Until recently, it looked as if the media had convinced the public that journalists were more reliable than the government;
-which means that public always thought that the government (official) was not reliable (again it does not mean that the official was always wrong).
Hence, A and D are eliminated.
Further,
However, this may be changing. With the passage of time, the media have lost lustre. They—having grown large and powerful—provoke the same public skepticism that other large institutions in the society do. A series of media scandals has contributed to this. Many Americans have concluded that the media are no more credible than the government, and public opinion surveys reflect much ambivalence about the press.
- Which means that now the public can’t even trust media blindfolded (again this does not mean that the media is always wrong).
Hence, B is eliminated and the answer choice is C.
E is out of scope.
Hope this clarifies your doubt.

Hi,
For option D, as you have stated, public always thought that the govt. was not reliable and with the passage of time, media lost its credibility as well. So, in nutshell in public's view both may be wrong at times. Agreed that officials are not always wrong but can be at times right?


Hi notYet. Thanks for the question. I’ll try to explain what I understood from the passage. The tone of this passage is opinionated. The author takes the side of governmental officials or leaders and criticizes media throughout the passage.
In this context, now if you read the question again, it asks what the public would assume when the media now (after the public’s opinion of media’s credibility has changed) challenges the action of a public official?
Obviously, the answer is that the media may be wrong.
Perhaps, had the author’s tone been neutral, answer D would be correct answer.
I hope this helps. Do let me know. :-)
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Topic & Scope

- The author discusses the negative effects that media ―leaks‖ have on foreign policy and the media‘s credibility.

Mapping the Passage


¶1 argues that the media‘s suspicion of government and lack of knowledge about the world harm government policy.
¶s2 and 3 introduce the concept of the ―leak‖ and explain why it‘s bad for foreign
policy.
¶4 states that the media was trusted by the public until recently, but are now met with skepticism.
¶5 argues that leaks are usually part of a power grab and that the media is a pawn in the game.
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Official Explanation

1. Based on the information in the passage, with which of the following statements would the author most likely agree?

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

Review the author‘s main arguments before looking for an answer choice that he‘s agree with.

(A) recalls the author‘s point in paragraph 2: ―Leaders often say one thing in public and something quite different in public conversation...‖ The author explains why this occurs—fear of media leaks—and clearly opposes such leaks. Therefore, the author must agree with (A)‘s contention that misinformation is sometimes warranted.

(A): The Correct Answer

(B): Opposite. This is the opposite of (A); for the same reasons that (A) is a valid inference, (B) isn‘t.

(C): Opposite. The author argues in paragraph 3 that policy benefits from a ―richness and variety of ideas.

(D): Opposite. The author‘s point in decrying leaks is that privacy is a necessary component of leadership.

(E): Opposite

Answer: A
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