The first sign that the Supreme Court was taking the health care litigation seriously — as if a sign were needed — came when it scheduled 5 1/2 hours of oral argument for the week of March 26.

The second sign came Feb. 3, when the court released its argument calendar for April, the final argument cycle of the term. Instead of the usual 12 cases scheduled for argument over a two-week period, it listed only six hours’ worth of argument, an unusually low number to say the least.

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