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WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
WASHINGTON–Supreme Court justices Wednesday heard an alien drug offender’s plea for atheism, the abolition of property and the end of American exceptionalism–and responded with a standing ovation.
The occasion wasn’t a case, of course, but the court’s spring musicale, a private concert for the justices and their guests.
The star, Broadway legend Barbara Cook, closed with “Imagine,” John Lennon’s 1971 song envisioning a world free of nations, religion and property, something strikingly at odds with court precedents granting privileges to religious institutions, enshrining property rights and limiting the reach of international law.
“Imagine no possessions. I wonder if you can,” Ms. Cook sang to the justices, seated just a few feet from her in the court’s East Conference Room.
“Imagine all the people, sharing all the world,” she continued, as Chief Justice John Roberts, Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas, Ruth Bader
...
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