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Higbie Slams Nobel Committee’s Double Standards, Backs Trump for Peace Prize

Carl Higbie didn’t mince words on his FRONTLINE program when he called out the obvious double standard around the Nobel Peace Prize and made a blunt case for President Trump to be considered. Higbie, a former Navy SEAL turned conservative commentator, used his platform to expose the hypocrisy of the political and media elites who praised symbolic gestures while ignoring real achievements.

Higbie’s critique follows a view many patriots share: Barack Obama’s 2009 award was handed out as a feel-good endorsement from the global elite, not for concrete peacemaking results, and that double standard rankles conservatives who watch real diplomacy play out. President Trump himself has publicly complained that Obama “did absolutely nothing” yet received the prize, a raw assessment that resonates with millions who watched American strength and interests eroded during that era.

What the mainstream refuses to acknowledge is that Trump’s record includes tangible diplomatic wins — from the Abraham Accords to high-stakes negotiations that helped end conflicts and secure hostage releases —achievements that actually saved lives and stabilized regions. Conservatives see a stark contrast between performative awards and the hard, gritty work of negotiating deals that stop bloodshed and protect allies, and they argue those accomplishments deserve real recognition.

Republican lawmakers have taken this argument seriously, nominating President Trump for the Nobel and forcing the conversation into the open where it belongs. Members of Congress, backed by foreign leaders and grassroots patriots, have formally put Trump’s name forward after recent breakthroughs, showing that this is not just cable punditry but a sustained, nationwide push to correct an obvious injustice.

Higbie’s on-the-ground reporting from the Middle East only sharpened his point — he’s been where the action is, speaking to the realities that the political class conveniently ignores. That firsthand coverage exposed the media’s reflex to moralize while overlooking who actually brokered peace and who enabled chaos, and it gave Higbie the moral authority to call out the Nobel Committee’s inconsistent standards.

If Americans care about fairness, strength, and results, we should demand the world stop pretending that virtue-signaling equals victory. Patriots should celebrate concrete wins and push back against institutions that reward optics over outcomes, and we should stand behind voices like Carl Higbie’s who refuse to let the powerful rewrite the record. The Nobel Committee can make its choice, but hardworking citizens know who truly put peace and American interests first.

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