The Nobel Delusion
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Mike Johnson wants Trump nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Let that sink in.
Some announcements are so detached from reality they almost read like satire. This week, Speaker Mike Johnson stood before cameras and declared — with a straight face — that he and Israel’s Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana are rallying global parliaments to nominate Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize.
Yes, you read that right. The same man who helped incite chaos at home and gutted diplomacy abroad is now being marketed as a peace icon.
Johnson called it an “objective fact” that no president has done more to “save lives and pursue peace.” Then, with solemn conviction, he quoted scripture: “Whoever saves one life, it is as though he has saved an entire world.”
But if saving lives were the metric, Trump’s record would read more like an indictment than a nomination.
Peace Through Power—or Power Through Propaganda?
Let’s review: Trump’s “peace” legacy includes abandoning the Iran nuclear deal, green-lighting civilian bombings in Yemen, and issuing an executive order that slashed refugee admissions to historic lows — leaving thousands trapped in war zones.
Meanwhile, his administration cut humanitarian aid to Palestinians, tore up environmental and global health treaties, and spent more time sanctioning allies than mediating peace.
This isn’t diplomacy; it’s demolition.
Johnson’s phrase — “peace through strength” — sounds noble, until you remember how Trump defined “strength.” It wasn’t restraint. It was spectacle. It was photo ops with dictators, military parades, and domestic crackdowns that turned American streets into war zones of their own.
Rewriting the Record, One Speech at a Time
What we’re watching isn’t foreign policy. It’s historical revisionism in real time. Johnson isn’t just flattering Trump; he’s rewriting his presidency as a fable of “strength” and “salvation.”
It’s the same trick every autocratic movement pulls: recast chaos as courage, cruelty as conviction, and collapse as “a golden age.”
Calling this campaign for a Nobel Peace Prize absurd would be generous. It’s dangerous. Because behind the absurdity lies a strategy — to blur the line between peace and power so completely that people stop noticing the difference.
And when they do that, democracy becomes just another casualty of political theater.
What Real Peace Looks Like
Peace doesn’t come from tweets threatening war. It doesn’t come from trade wars or travel bans. It comes from justice, accountability, and empathy — the very things Trump spent four years dismantling.
The truth is, the people who keep this country peaceful aren’t the ones with Nobel ambitions. They’re the ones sitting around kitchen tables trying to keep the lights on while politicians use their faith and fear as props.
They’re teachers, nurses, organizers, veterans — the ones who know that peace isn’t about “strength.” It’s about shared survival.
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When corporate outlets treat speeches like Johnson’s as political theater instead of propaganda, truth gets lost. That’s why independent journalism matters more than ever. If you want coverage that cuts through the PR and calls it what it is — join as a paid subscriber today.
Because we can’t afford a media that normalizes delusion while the world burns.
Peace isn’t a brand. It’s a responsibility. And right now, it’s one we’re all being asked to defend.











