While the failed Biden administration spent four years bumbling from one foreign policy disaster to another, President Donald Trump is already reshaping the global order—and he's doing it on the globalists' own turf.
On Thursday morning in Davos, Switzerland, the President officially launched the "Board of Peace," a bold new initiative that signals America is back in the business of ending conflicts rather than starting them. The event, held in the same venue where Trump delivered a powerful address just yesterday, drew a packed house with standing room only—proof that the world is hungry for real leadership.
A New Vision for Global Peace
The founding members of the Board walked in one by one as their names were announced, taking their seats on a stage dominated by sand-colored chairs arranged around a prominent white chair in the center—symbolism that wasn't lost on anyone watching. This is Trump's show, and everyone knows it.
The event comes just two days into Trump's historic trip abroad, where he's been working around the clock to restore American credibility that was shattered under the previous administration. Remember when Biden couldn't even stay awake during climate summits? Those days are over, folks.
America First Means Peace First
This is what real diplomacy looks like, Patriots. While the legacy media and their globalist handlers at the World Economic Forum probably expected Trump to play nice with their "Great Reset" agenda, he's instead using their own platform to advance American interests and genuine peace initiatives.
The Board of Peace represents everything the Washington establishment fears: an America that leads through strength, brokers deals instead of endless wars, and puts the interests of everyday citizens ahead of defense contractor profits and globalist schemes.
After four years of weakness that emboldened our enemies and left our allies questioning American resolve, President Trump is proving once again that when America leads, the world follows. The question now is simple: will the entrenched interests in Washington get on board, or get out of the way?
