Supreme Court Dissent, LACMA Opening, and Vatican-White House Theological Dispute
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson publicly criticized conservative Supreme Court justices for issuing emergency orders favoring the Trump administration, describing them as 'scratch-paper musings.' The Los Angeles County Museum of Art unveiled its $724 million David Geffen Galleries after a 20-year redevelopment effort. Separately, a theological dispute over Just War doctrine has emerged following President Trump's public clash with Pope Leo.
Progressive outlets are likely to frame Justice Jackson's dissent as a principled stand against a conservative court that is inappropriately using emergency powers to shield the Trump administration from legal accountability.
The factual record shows that Justice Jackson formally dissented against multiple emergency orders, the LACMA completed a long-planned architectural overhaul, and a public disagreement between the Trump administration and the Vatican has prompted renewed debate over Just War theological doctrine.
Conservative outlets are likely to frame Jackson's criticism as a partisan attack from a liberal justice, arguing that emergency orders reflect legitimate judicial discretion within established legal norms.
The factual record shows that Justice Jackson formally dissented against multiple emergency orders, the LACMA completed a long-planned architectural overhaul, and a public disagreement between the Trump administration and the Vatican has prompted renewed debate over Just War theological doctrine.
Justice Jackson issued a formal written critique of conservative colleagues' emergency rulings, LACMA opened its $724 million Geffen Galleries, and a Trump-Vatican dispute has reignited a theological debate over justified warfare.