Some bar exam advice: no need to overcomplicate anything.
Issue: What question do you hope to answer in your conclusion. Make it clear for the graders so that they can give you whatever points they give for this. Rules: Don't give them rules that aren't needed to answer the question stated in the issue. Don't leave out rules that are needed. Don't over salt, don't under salt (so to speak). Analysis: It's not now the time to decide that you're going to zealously represent one of the fake characters in the hypothetical and claim that everything the other character has said is wrong. Rather, pretend like both sides are paying you and provide any reasonable arguments that they might make. This is where all those points come pouring in. A hurricane of points. Or tornado. Some weather event. Conclusion. The conclusion pretends like it's more important than it is. Don't believe it. State something, but most of the points are already gained, or already not gained, when you get to this part of the process.
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