The Hypothetical Machine
Justice Alito's most masterful hypotheticals — deconstructed to reveal the method behind each one.
While Justice Breyer builds philosophical thought experiments, Alito anchors his hypotheticals in vivid, everyday scenes. A CEO being pitched a product. A person getting speeding tickets. A woman being stalked.
His hypotheticals are realistic enough that attorneys can’t dismiss them, pointed enough to expose exactly where a legal rule breaks down. He uses “suppose” 19.9x more than the attorneys arguing before him.
The Dog Toy Pitch
“Let me envision this scene. Somebody in Jack Daniel's comes to the CEO and says, I have a great idea for a product... it's going to be a dog toy... and what's going to be in this dog toy is dog urine. You think the CEO is going to say that's a great idea?”
Testing whether a parody defense can override trademark dilution by making the hypothetical viscerally absurd.
Trademark dilution vs. First Amendment parody
Single-step concrete — anchored in a vivid everyday scene too real to dismiss
The Four Lawyers
“4 people, 2 men and 2 women... they're all consenting adults, highly educated. They're all lawyers.”
Testing the limiting principle of marriage equality — if the basis is consent and commitment, what stops a four-person relationship?
Due Process and Equal Protection — marriage as fundamental right
Reductio ad absurdum — drives the principle to its logical extreme
The Escalating Chain
“Suppose the state legislature passes a law that says all future redistricting will be done by an independent commission. The governor vetoes it. The state supreme court says, we're going to order it anyway. Is that permissible? What if the court goes further and says, we're going to set the district lines ourselves? What if it says, we're going to cancel the next election?”
Testing the independent state legislature theory by escalating judicial power step by step until the stopping point reveals itself.
Elections Clause — who controls federal election rules
Escalating conditional chain — 4 progressively extreme steps
The Stalking Victim
“Suppose someone is being stalked. She has gone to the police, they've told her there's nothing they can do tonight, she genuinely fears for her life, and she goes to a licensed dealer to purchase a firearm for self-defense. Under your regulation, she has to wait 48 hours. What is your answer to her?”
Making the cost of a waiting period viscerally concrete — a specific person, a specific night, a specific fear.
Second Amendment — individual right to bear arms
Single-step concrete — too real to dismiss, forces the attorney to answer a person, not a policy
The Implicit Delegation Fiction
“You're invoking Chevron, but Chevron rests on the premise that when Congress uses an ambiguous term, it's implicitly delegating interpretive authority to the agency. Do you really believe that? Do you think a majority of the Congress that passed this statute sat down and said, "We're going to use this ambiguous phrase, and what we mean by that is — the agency should fill it in however it sees fit"?”
Challenging the foundational fiction of Chevron deference — that ambiguity equals implicit delegation — by describing the premise in plain terms until it sounds absurd.
Administrative law — Chevron deference and implied congressional delegation
Common-sense incredulity — restates a legal fiction in plain, everyday terms to expose its implausibility
Hypothetical Markers
The words that signal a hypothetical is coming.
| Marker | Turns | % of All Turns |
|---|---|---|
| "suppose" | 768 | 5.2% |
| "say that" | 528 | 3.6% |
| "what if" | 391 | 2.7% |
| "let's say" | 314 | 2.1% |
| "assume" | 162 | 1.1% |
| "hypothetical" | 143 | 1.0% |
Construction Patterns
Three distinct methods Alito uses to build hypotheticals.
Single-Step Concrete
Anchored in a vivid everyday scene — a specific person, a specific situation. Too real to dismiss. The attorney has to answer a person, not a policy.
The stalking victim, the dog toy pitch
Escalating Chain
A staircase of progressively extreme steps. Each one seems reasonable alone, but the chain reveals where the rule breaks. Tests for principled stopping points.
Moore v. Harper: legislature → commission → court sets lines → court cancels election
Common-Sense Incredulity
Restates a legal fiction or doctrinal premise in plain, everyday terms until the underlying assumption sounds absurd. Punctures abstractions with directness.
The implicit delegation fiction — "Do you really believe that?"
Present Your Own Argument
See what hypothetical Justice Alito constructs to test your legal reasoning.
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