I understand your concern about scope, that's actually
good CR instinct! But let me show you why D works perfectly here.
The Key Insight:Ask yourself:
Who will use this new SwiftRail station in Jetto?Answer: SwiftRail's passengers.
SwiftRail's passengers and "passengers in Jetto using SwiftRail" are
the same people. The station is being built by SwiftRail, so only SwiftRail passengers will use it. When D tells us that SwiftRail's passengers value efficiency and convenience, it's telling us that
the exact people who will use this station want what SwiftRail is offering.
Simple Logic Chain:1. SwiftRail builds station → SwiftRail passengers use it
2. SwiftRail promises efficiency & convenience
3. SwiftRail passengers say "we want efficiency & convenience" ←
D gives us this4.Therefore: The project will put (these) passengers first ✓
Why your concern doesn't apply here:If the question were about Jetto's
general population or non-SwiftRail users, you'd be right to flag the scope. But since the station is
FOR SwiftRail passengers, their preferences are exactly what we need to know.
Common trap: Don't confuse "narrow scope" with "wrong scope." The relevant population for a company's prediction about its own service is
that company's customers - not a broader geographic group.
Answer: DAbhishekDhanraJ72
I crossed D thinking it should be passengers of Jetto not only swift rail passengers.
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