Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - BONUS: "You Can't Stop Us!" - Bill O'Reilly Slams Mexico's President For Not Accepting Trump's Help

Episode Date: May 6, 2025

Bill O'Reilly slams Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum for not accepting President Trump's help. He also goes after Democrats for posturing on America attacking the Mexican cartels. Learn more about your ad ...choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey, it's Ryan Reynolds here for MintMobil. Now, I was looking for fun ways to tell you that Mint's offer of unlimited premium wireless for $15 a month is back. So I thought it would be fun if we made $15 bills. But it turns out that's very illegal. So there goes my big idea for the commercial. Give it a try at mintmobile.com slash switch. A upfront payment of $45 for three-month plan equivalent to $15 per month required. New customer offer for first three months only.
Starting point is 00:00:26 Speed slow after 35 gigabytes of networks busy. Taxes and fees extra. See mintmobile.com. Mexico. James Taylor sang about it. Kay wants to go down to Mexico, but he's never really been, but he'd sure like to go. Good song, good too. I've been all over Mexico, a beautiful country.
Starting point is 00:00:45 I don't recommend you go there, I will never go there again. Is that a shocking statement? Mexico is perhaps the most corrupt country in the Western Hemisphere. It's a dangerous country. It's run by drug cartels. who are the most vicious animals you could ever imagine. And that's what I want to talk to you about. So the stats are hard to get because there is no reliable reportage in Mexico about the cartels.
Starting point is 00:01:16 Because if you are a journalist in Mexico and you do report on them, you can get killed and they can kill your family and everybody knows it. All right. But from the human rights groups, so far this century, Mexico, close to a million people have been murdered or kidnapped, disappeared, they call it, by the cartels. Now, is that accurate? I think it is, but nobody can prove it, but the number is astronomical. So if you drive your automobile from Chula Vista, California, down to Cabo, Okay, in Baja, California.
Starting point is 00:01:59 You may get there, then you might not. And if you run into trouble with banditos or whatever, nobody's going to help you. Police aren't going to help you. A lot of Americans are living in Rosarita Veitch, just South Tijuana. Okay, nice, cheap lifestyle, I got it. Somebody comes in your house, nobody's helping you okay it's a dangerous place so a few years ago I was uh in a town called La Paz and we're doing some diving and whale looking for the whales and all
Starting point is 00:02:38 that it was really beautiful environment great trip La Paz 100% run by the cartel they own all the buildings all the bars all the restaurants you saw them at night they all hang around you know get the chains they got you know all the You mess with them, people smuggling, you name what they're doing. Now, the drive from La Paz down to Cabo, they had military checkpoints every five miles. All right, we're Mexican military, we're there, because that's a big tourist hub. And in Cabo itself, I did not see a lot of cartel. Acapulco, all right, on a Pacific side, totally run by the cartel.
Starting point is 00:03:25 tells now. Whole town. So that brings me to why I'm telling you all this. So President Trump, and I've talked to him about this extensively one-on-one, I know. He wants to cut down on the American deaths from narcotics smuggling, and all of it comes from Mexico. When I say all of it, I mean the fentanyl, the heroin, the cocaine. There's a little bit that comes in from Asia through Vancouver, Canada, but not a significant amount. The big narcotic smuggling comes from Mexico, and it has for 50 years. The Mexican government has lost control over it, okay? And Trump has designated the Mexican cartels as terrorist organizations. What does that mean? It means that United States forces contract these people down, the cartel members and leaders,
Starting point is 00:04:31 kill them, assassinate them, like we did with Soleimani in Iran, or disappear them, take them to Guantanamo or back to the United States prison. We can violate the sovereignty of Mexican border, go in, do what we want. We have not done that so far because President Trump is trying to persuade the Mexican president, Claudia Shahnbaum, to cooperate in military action against the cartels. Shinebom will not. It's shocking because Shinebom knows that she doesn't run her own country. Now, Trump says that she's afraid of the cartel.
Starting point is 00:05:19 afraid of being assassinated, which is absolutely possible. Obrador, the president before Scheinbaum, he absolutely was in a tank for the cartels. Now, I don't have any direct proof that he took money or his people took money. I don't know. But he was in a tank. Let them do whatever they wanted to do.
Starting point is 00:05:37 And what they wanted to do was send fentanyl and heroin to the United States. And he allowed it. Obedoer allowed it, along with millions of migrants. Overdoor was so destructive to this country. Remember Biden going down there and paling around with him? Oh, drove me nuts. Anyway, Scheinbaum has no cogent reason not to cooperate with the United States
Starting point is 00:06:05 to get this disease out of our country. Oh, it's the sovereign tooth. No, we want your cooperation, madam. We can already do it by your. U.S. law after 9-11, we can take out terrorists anywhere in the world. And you can't stop us, just like you can't stop the cartels. And we're your biggest trading partner. So if you mess with us, your whole country is going to collapse. Now, Trump's being patient. If I were president, I would have done this a while back. But he was being patient, trying to persuade this woman
Starting point is 00:06:47 to do the right thing, not only for America, but for our own country. I mean, you've got a million people, and we have this century, more than a million drug ODs. It's a little more complicated because these people who use narcotics in America, it's the biggest drug market in the world, the United States. Some of that's on them. I don't give the users a past. I don't think they have an incurable disease. I think they make a decision.
Starting point is 00:07:22 They don't care about anybody else. I think they're cowards. And I think they're unbelievably selfish. And they don't care what damage they do, generalizing them. There are exceptions to every rule. But more than a million are dead because of stuff sent from Mexico. In the past, that's an act of war. Wars have been started for a lot less than that.
Starting point is 00:07:45 Now, in this country, conservative, traditional, many Republicans, not all agree with me. But the Democratic Party does not, okay? So Congressman Gregory Meeks, ultra-liberal from New York, he's appalled that Trump might want to go and use military action against the cartels. Donald Trump has taken a wrecking ball to our foreign policy. treated our allies as adversaries and our adversaries as allies, threatening to invade some of those allies, and launched a trade war that is hurting our economy and our constituents. Okay, so Meeks, you know, doesn't want to solve the problem.
Starting point is 00:08:33 He doesn't want, he's okay with a million Mexicans being assassinated, and more than a million in this century, drug deaths, overdose. in the USA. He's okay with it. Because he says, no, solution. None. Nothing. Oh, he's a friend of root cause. Yeah. Okay. We need more treatment. No. Not going to stop it. Not most addicts don't want treatment. Okay. Got it? Greg? He doesn't care. Could not care less. Then there is actually action on the Democratic side by Congressman Joaquin Castro. Here's what he says, quote, all right. Congressman Nadia Velazquez led nearly two dozen members of Congress in introducing a resolution.
Starting point is 00:09:28 We're affirming the United States commitment to respecting Mexico's sovereignty. Resolution condemns any call for U.S. military action in Mexico without authorization for the U.S. Congress and the consent of the Mexican government. Today's introduction follows a rise in belligerent rhetoric about Mexico from Trump and high-ranking officials within this administration, unquote. All right, again, Joaquin Castro, Texas, he doesn't want to solve the problem. He doesn't care. He wants the posture.
Starting point is 00:10:04 Oh, you need a Mexican government's permission. No, we don't. I guess you can't read Congressman Castro because there is a law passed after 9-11, okay, designated terrorists. Maybe you read that. Okay, maybe you read it. ISIS. Remember ISIS, Joaquin, remember?
Starting point is 00:10:26 Okay, what happened to ISIS? Trump blew the hell out of them. And Obama did too, to some extent. Your guy. Where were they? Did we get the permission of the Iraqi government to blow the hell out of them? We did not. The Syrian government, the Iranian government?
Starting point is 00:10:45 No. It's so frustrating. It really is. Why, why would liberal Democrats not want to solve this problem and eliminate the violent cartels? Simple as that. Why do you not want to do that? Thank you.

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