The argument made by the town representative dismisses the claims in the advertisements (that the new pier will ruin the town’s charm) by focusing solely on the motivations of the developer funding the advertisements. This is an ad hominem fallacy, where an argument is dismissed based on the characteristics or motivations of the person making the claim, rather than evaluating the claim itself.
• Option A: Incorrect. The argument does not compare motivations between different groups of people making the same claim; it focuses on the motivations of one developer funding the advertisements.
• Option B: Incorrect. The representative does not attack the merits of the claims directly, nor does the argument provide evidence to counter the advertisements’ claims.
• Option C: Incorrect. The argument does not mischaracterize the claims made in the advertisements; it acknowledges them but dismisses them based on the developer’s motivations.
• Option D: Correct. This option accurately identifies the flaw: the argument dismisses the claim by attacking the motivations of the developer funding the advertisements, without addressing whether the claim about the pier ruining the town’s charm is valid.
• Option E: Incorrect. While it may be true that other advertisements could come from different sources, this is not the central flaw in the town representative’s argument.
Thus, D best describes the flaw in the reasoning.