States Can Control All Prices After Market Entry
This trap appears as a wrong-answer choice in 1 active question. Spotting how it is built is the repair: read each example's “why it's attractive” before the “why it's wrong.”
Subject distribution
- Constitutional Law1
Example wrong choices
21872_scripturequest_price_gate · CONSTITUTIONAL_LAW · Choice AThe law is valid because price rules never affect commerce.
Why it's attractive
The choice flatters the belief that price regulation is local housekeeping. The breaker is the word never: prices are the substance of commerce.
Why it's wrong
The answer says price rules never affect commerce, which overclaims from the answer text itself.
Spot it next time
Mark 'never' and ask whether the stem itself is about commerce.
21872_scripturequest_price_gate · CONSTITUTIONAL_LAW · Choice BArticle IV privileges and immunities is the only relevant doctrine.
Why it's attractive
The choice reaches for a familiar state-discrimination clause and tries to end the search there. The breaker is the call itself: the item asks for a dormant Commerce Clause objection, and this price gate is commercial regulation.
Why it's wrong
The call asks for a dormant Commerce Clause objection; Article IV privileges and immunities is a different doctrine home.
Spot it next time
Return to the call: it asks for a dormant Commerce Clause objection.
21872_scripturequest_price_gate · CONSTITUTIONAL_LAW · Choice DThe law is valid because a state may control all nationwide prices once a seller enters its market.
Why it's attractive
The choice starts from a true-sounding local-power idea: the state can regulate sales inside its own market. The breaker is the jump to all nationwide prices, which is the overreach the Gold Key forbids.
Why it's wrong
The answer stretches in-state sales power into control over all nationwide prices.
Spot it next time
Separate in-state sales regulation from out-of-state price control.
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