President Trump's revolutionary Board of Peace is gaining momentum as the legitimate alternative to the corrupt, anti-American United Nations, with Washington Examiner senior columnist Guy Benson declaring the UN has become a "sick joke" that needs to be replaced.
Following Trump's second high-level meeting with the Board of Peace last week, Benson's comments highlight what Patriots have known for decades – the United Nations is nothing more than a globalist money pit that consistently works against American interests while we foot the bill.
"The United Nations has become a sick joke," Benson stated, echoing the frustrations of millions of Americans who are tired of watching dictatorships and terrorist-supporting regimes lecture us about human rights from their cushy Manhattan headquarters.
"The Board of Peace should be an alternative," Benson continued, recognizing Trump's brilliant strategy to create a new international framework that actually serves peace-loving nations instead of appeasing America's enemies.
Trump's Board of Peace, originally created to oversee Gaza reconstruction and manage international conflicts, is quickly evolving into exactly what the world needs – a coalition of nations that share democratic values and actually want to solve problems instead of grandstanding for cameras.
While the UN wastes billions on bureaucratic nonsense and gives platforms to Iran, China, and other bad actors, Trump's Board of Peace focuses on results. The group brings together countries genuinely committed to stability and reconstruction, not political theater.
America First Diplomacy Works
This is vintage Trump – identifying a broken system and building something better from scratch. Why should American taxpayers continue funding an organization that consistently votes against us and provides cover for our enemies?
The Board of Peace represents everything the UN should have been but never was: efficient, results-oriented, and actually committed to peace instead of anti-Western propaganda.
As Trump continues building this alternative framework, one question remains: How long before other frustrated nations abandon the UN's circus and join a coalition that actually gets things done?
