Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - Empire State O'Reilly: Public Disorder

Episode Date: February 14, 2024

Bill reports on the rise of public disorder in New York City. Originally only available in the New York City area, Bill’s Empire State O’Reilly commentary addresses local New York issues, but th...ose issues have implications, impact the country, and mirror problems in other states. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Everybody's waiting for the returns of Long Island's third district where I live. I'm Mazi Philip, Tom Swazi. Now it snowed. I got three inches on my driveway out here in the north shore of Long Island. You know, look, it never snows anymore here. You know that. I got a garage full of sleds and space mobiles and, you know, all kinds of snow stuff. when the urchins were little, but you can't even ice skate on the ponds here anymore.
Starting point is 00:00:36 I used to ice skate when I was a kid, I think I told you this, for two straight months, and the Westbury Pond. And that's where I learned how to play hockey. I played hockey for shamanaut ice hockey. But now it's a benign climate. It's like we live in North Carolina. Anyway, the snow and the weather will suppress the vote, but I don't know who that helps. I don't know if that helps Swazi or Mazi.
Starting point is 00:01:04 Okay, I don't know. If they ever got married, she'd be Mazi-Swasi, right? Well, okay. Big election, not just for New York, but for the country, and we will have analysis tomorrow on common sense. Okay, so you heard about this subway thing. 4.30 yesterday, Bronx, people coming home from work, six shot, one dead, and two kids. So I've been saying and saying and saying that the rise of public disorder in New York City is horrifying.
Starting point is 00:01:48 And we do not have elected officials who will confront this rise. So once Hogle beat Zeldin last year, it was over because Hogle isn't going to crack down on crime. And Adams really cannot crack down on it because of the no bail. So these violent criminals, they punch you in the mouth, they attack police officers. And two hours later, they're right back out doing whatever they want to do. I estimate that a criminal in New York City can commit maybe 200 crimes, separate crimes, before being punished to any degree. And that includes selling narcotics, muggings, whatever.
Starting point is 00:02:39 So we have five district attorneys, because we have five boroughs in the nation's largest city. By far in a way, Alvin Bragg gets the most heat because he's the Manhattan district attorney. and he doesn't want to prosecute criminals. But Darcel Clark in the Bronx, it's pretty much Alvin Bragg's twin. She didn't want to prosecute criminals. Melinda Katz and Queens, she doesn't go into that far-left category for me.
Starting point is 00:03:14 But Brooklyn does. All right, Michael McMahon. I mean, he's not doing anything to clean it up. Staten Island, I'm sorry, Michael McMahon is Staten Island. I read my notes wrong here. He's okay. Okay, McMahon is okay. He doesn't want social disorder.
Starting point is 00:03:35 But Brooklyn, Eric Gonzalez, he gets three out of the five that they don't really care. Now, in the body of common sense tonight, we're going to give you some startling statistics. I mean, it's just unbelievable. um about violent crime 74% of all the victims of violent crime in new york city are either black or latino okay 88% of criminals arrested for violent activity are black or latino 88%. So In order to get this under control, the police would have to flood the zones in the neighborhoods that blacks and Latinos dominate. But that would be racist. And that's why it has all fallen apart.
Starting point is 00:04:38 Racial politics has led to the incredible rise of social disorder in our city. And that has led to hundreds of thousands of people leaving. But the poor and working class cannot leave. They can't afford to leave. And that's why they're being victimized. That's why you listen to Common Sense and WABC Radio, because we give you the why of it. Few other new J's and Cs do that.

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