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One line in Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia's dissent on gay marriage captured the public imagination after Friday's historic decision.

"Ask the nearest hippie."

The conservative was skewering the argument that marriage brings with it freedoms such as expression, intimacy and spirituality.

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"Who ever thought that intimacy and spirituality [whatever that means] were freedoms?" he wrote. "And if intimacy is, one would think that Freedom of Intimacy is abridged rather than expanded by marriage. Ask the nearest hippie."

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The suggestion immediately made a splash on Twitter, with commenters suggesting it become a T-shirt slogan or wondering what decade Scalia was living in.

The fact that Scalia wrote "ask the nearest hippie" instead of "ask the nearest hipster" shows how out of touch with the times he is. — Martin (@Heisenbergkamp) June 26, 2015

"Ask the nearest hippie" is the greatest thing I've ever heard. — Christopher Hayes (@chrislhayes) June 26, 2015

Theory: Scalia has been a secret goth this whole time RT @josh_levin Scalia demands: "Ask the nearest hippie" pic.twitter.com/34DPDG60C8 — Josiaps Madzingis (@josiah10000) June 26, 2015

The line quickly spawned a hashtag — #askthenearesthippie — and the inevitable Twitter account @nearesthippie.

At the Huffington Post, staffers were inspired by Scalia's advice to ask an actual hippie, rocker David Crosby, who happened to be in their office.

"I think he's slagging gays and hippies," said Crosby. "I don't think he understands either one."

Scalia is known for his memorable turns of phrase. In Thursday's dissent from the decision upholding Obamacare subsidies, he quipped, "We should start calling this law SCOTUScare." He also tossed in a few colorful flourishes, referring to the majority's reasoning as "jiggery-pokery" and "pure applesauce."