This paper develops the institutional implications of the Noble Person Test, a framework for evaluating justice proposed in [Shuhao Z., Beyond the Veil of Ignorance: The Noble Person Test as a Framework for Justice]. The Noble Per- son Test evaluates institutional arrangements by asking whether a hypothetical agent—default self-interested, intellectually honest, and persuadable under strict conditions—would accept the arrangement from every position within it. This pa- per argues that the test is best operationalised not as individual thought experiment but as structured adversarial debate: a red team representing those bearing the costs of an arrangement defaults to refusal, while a blue team representing those proposing the arrangement bears the burden of proving necessity and the absence of less costly alternatives. The paper derives four structural features that just insti- tutions must possess, examines the relationship between the Noble Person Test and democratic governance, applies the framework to three domains of legal and pol- icy controversy, and proposes concrete institutional mechanisms for implementing adversarial review. The paper draws on existing practices in military red-teaming, intelligence analysis, and judicial adversarial procedure to argue that the proposed mechanism is not utopian but an extension of proven institutional designs.