News For You

Sisson Comments On Peace Deal

Harry Sisson doesn’t like the peace deal. That’s all you really need to know.

The 23-year-old Democrat influencer, who’s made a small career out of parroting progressive talking points on TikTok and Twitter, is now casting doubt on the most significant Middle East diplomatic breakthrough in decades — a peace deal negotiated, signed, and celebrated across both hemispheres. But he knows it won’t last. Because… well, just trust him. He has strong opinions, zero foreign policy credentials, and a ring light.


Naturally, posters saw right through it. And here’s the thing: Sisson is so consistently, comically wrong that his prediction of failure practically reads like a certified guarantee of success. If Sisson doubts it, odds are it’s built to last.

And why the reflexive doomposting? Because the man who pulled it off is Donald J. Trump.

This is how it works in the progressive media ecosystem. If Trump solves a crisis, they have to hope it unravels. If lives are saved and hostages return home, they have to find a narrative that turns success into scandal. It’s not about results — it’s about control. And peace? Real peace? That terrifies them. Because peace means Trump wins. And if Trump wins, the whole script falls apart.


Meanwhile, the rest of the world is busy celebrating. In Gaza, in Tel Aviv, in Jerusalem — even in Cairo and Riyadh — people are on the streets, chanting, cheering, waving flags, and yes, praising Donald Trump. He’s being hailed as the man who actually ended a war that career diplomats had milked for decades with no results. The so-called “unthinkable” just happened, and Trump is at the center of it.

And what are Democrats doing? Holding niche protests with signs that say “No Kings,” as if the return of hostages and a ceasefire amounts to some authoritarian takeover. It’s painfully ironic. They’re not protesting war — they’re protesting its end. Because they didn’t get to control the ending.


If ever there was a moment for the Nobel Peace Prize to reassert its relevance, this is it. And if Trump doesn’t receive it, then what little credibility that prize still clings to will vanish completely.

But don’t expect Harry Sisson to cheer that on. He can’t afford it. A lasting Trump-led peace threatens his clicks, his credibility, and his curated brand of outrage. If the world heals, Sisson loses content. And if Trump keeps succeeding? He might even have to get a job. A real one.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

To Top
$(".comment-click-6931").on("click", function(){ $(".com-click-id-6931").show(); $(".disqus-thread-6931").show(); $(".com-but-6931").hide(); }); // The slider being synced must be initialized first $('.post-gallery-bot').flexslider({ animation: "slide", controlNav: false, animationLoop: true, slideshow: false, itemWidth: 80, itemMargin: 10, asNavFor: '.post-gallery-top' }); $('.post-gallery-top').flexslider({ animation: "fade", controlNav: false, animationLoop: true, slideshow: false, prevText: "<", nextText: ">", sync: ".post-gallery-bot" }); });