CR, Difficulty level: 700, Boldface, Source: ManhattanGMAT

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The president's nominees to federal circuit courts have been judged conservative for their stands on hot-button issues. But a review of their financial disclosure forms and Senate questionnaires reveals that the nominees are more notable for their close ties to corporate and economic interests, especially the energy and mining industries. Some of them were paid lobbyists for those same interests. Further, the nominees with industry ties were overwhelmingly appointed to circuit courts regarded as traditional battlegrounds over litigation affecting these industries. Independent observers who follow the federal bench believe that the extensive corporate involvement among so many of the nominees is unprecedented.

In the argument above, the two portions in boldface pay which of the following roles?

(A) The first is a generalization that the author aims to attack; the second is that attack.

(B) The first is a pattern that the author acknowledges as true; the second is the author's conclusion based on that acknowledgment.

(C) The first is a phenomenon that the author accepts as true; the second is evidence in support of the author's conclusion.

(D) The first is the author's position based on the evidence cited; the second is a pattern presented in support of that position.

(E) The first is an exception to a rule introduced in the argument; the second provides the reasoning behind the exception

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by arihantdas » Wed Dec 19, 2018 12:15 am
A: BF1 can be a generalization, but it's certainly not being attacked by the author.
B: BF2 is not the author's conclusion. It's a supporting evidence.
C: Correct, although I don't think BF1 is necessarily a phenomenon that the author "accepts." It's the opinion of others that he merely restates.
D: BF1 is not the author's position. BF2 is not related to BF1.
E: Nothing in this passage suggests there's anything that can be interpreted as an exception to a rule, with perhaps the .. ahem, exception of the last sentence (the level of extensive corporate involvement among so many of the nominees *may* be a historical exception since it's deemed to be "unprecedented").

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is this question from a Manhattan prep Gmat CAT/practice test?