CELEBRITY
36 MINUTES AGO: the Trump administration submitted arguments to the Supreme Court claiming that no court — including the Supreme Court — can question Trump’s decision to deploy military troops against US cities.
The Supreme Court is bracing for a constitutional showdown after the Trump administration filed a stunning legal brief asserting that no court — not even the Supreme Court itself — has the authority to review or block President Trump’s decision to deploy military troops against U.S. cities.
The filing, delivered late this evening, argues that presidential war powers are “exclusive and non-reviewable,” effectively placing Trump’s military decisions beyond judicial oversight.
Legal scholars are calling the claim “unprecedented,” “radical,” and “a direct challenge to the very structure of American democracy.”
Inside the Court, the shock was immediate. Sources close to several justices say the argument has triggered an emergency round of internal discussions, with both conservative and liberal members privately alarmed by the administration’s sweeping assertion of unchecked authority.
Former federal judges warn that if the Court were to accept Trump’s argument, it would mark the largest expansion of executive power in modern U.S. history, potentially allowing any president to deploy troops domestically without justification, oversight, or restraint.
At the White House, officials are staying silent — but on Capitol Hill, lawmakers from both parties are already preparing for what could become the most explosive constitutional crisis since Watergate.
The Supreme Court is expected to respond swiftly.
And what happens next may determine whether presidential power has limits at all.




