Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - The Oreilly Update January 9 2026
Episode Date: January 11, 2026ICE agent info, JD Vance defends ICE officer, trouble in Iran, and the war powers act. Plus, the Message of the Day, why people jump to conclusions before all of the facts are in. Learn more about you...r ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Bill O'Reilly here. You are listening to the O'Reilly Update.
Coming up next, the news with Mike Slater.
Thank you, Bill.
It is Friday, January 9th, 20206.
Here's this happening today in America.
Ice agent info.
J.D. has his back.
Trouble in Iran and the War Powers Act.
It's all coming up.
Then Bill's going to be here with your message of the day.
But first, the ice agent who shot and killed the woman who drove a vehicle into him,
is part of a specially trained tactical unit called the Ice ERO.
That's Enforcement and Removal Operations Special Response Team.
This group provides high-risk operational support for all immigration enforcement actions,
and they receive special advanced training in tactical operations, firearms, defensive tactics, and crowd control.
Congressman Daniel Godlin called ice untrained thugs.
That's not true about any ice agent, but certainly not this guy.
This same ice agent back in June was dragged by a car 100 yards, also in Minnesota,
suffered serious injuries, stitches in his hand, 20 stitches in his arm.
A jury in Salt Lake found that illegal alien who he was trying to detain,
guilty of assault and a federal officer with a dangerous and deadly weapon, the car, causing bodily injury.
Our vice president having none of the media spin in the White House press briefing room,
he took to the podium, quoted a CNN headline which said outrage after ICE officer kills U.S. citizen.
The vice president said, what that headline leaves out,
is that the woman was there to interfere with a legitimate law enforcement operation in the
United States of America. What that headline leaves out is that the woman is part of a broader
left-wing network to attack, to docks, to assault, and to make it impossible for our ICE officers
to do their job. If the media wants to tell the truth, they ought to tell the truth that a group
of left-wing radicals have been working tirelessly, sometimes using domestic terror techniques
to try to make it impossible for the president of the United States to do what the American
people elected him to do, which is to enforce our immigration laws.
The regime in Iran is in serious trouble.
These protests lately seem different than ones in the past.
We'll see.
We're now over 12 days into them.
Evidence of a government building totally in flames.
Many people chanting, long live the Shah.
A reference to the exiled son of the former Shah.
And a reference to the last time the Iranian people were free back in 1979.
Inflation's at 40% in Iran right now.
protesters changed the name of a street in Tehran to Donald Trump Street.
The Senate passed a war resolutions act, limiting the president's power to further engage in Venice away.
It's a bit late.
It needed 51 votes to pass.
It got 52.
Even if it passes the House, the president's not going to sign it, obviously.
And it doesn't have a veto-proof majority in the Senate.
Five Senate Republicans voted in favor of it.
I'm Mike Slater.
I have a podcast, Politics by Faith.
You can listen to it anywhere you listen to your podcast.
Bill O'Reilly has your message of the day.
Next.
Time now for the O'Reilly Update, message of the day.
On this Friday, one of the most important things for every human being to know is that
persuasion is very difficult.
People believe what they want to believe.
And many human beings, no matter what evidence you give them, no matter how you frame
whatever you're talking about, if they don't want to believe it, they're not going to
believe it.
And the converse is true.
They want to believe there is a Martian living next door.
That is what they will believe.
Now the best example of this is what happened in Minneapolis with the ice shooting.
Within minutes, people formed an opinion of what actually went down.
The left-wingers, of course, the woman involved, who was killed, was totally innocent,
no deficit of conduct, and the ICE agents are fascist murderers. On the other side, the people
who believe that immigration law should be upheld were saying, oh, the woman was breaking the law,
it was partially her fault, what happened to her, and the government is well within its rights
to control illegal immigration. So that was within minutes before any evidence, before any tape,
whatever. And I don't think anybody's mind was changed by anything should not have been. You cannot
make a determination on a shooting from television videotape. You would need an enhanced, very, very
methodical presentation, which is what would happen in a court of law. I'm Bill O'Reilly. I approve the
message by writing it. You can reach me. Bill at bill o'Reilly.com. Bill at bill o'Reilly.com. Name in town,
H2 O'Pine.
Let's go to the mail, Robert Parsh in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Bill, my nature is to give the benefit of doubt to law enforcement, but after watching the videos
multiple times, I have difficulty understanding the actions of the ICE agent.
In addition, troubled by most of the questions you posed in today's message, when the officer
fighter's weapon, he seems clearly be on the side of the vehicle and not in danger of being
run over.
Can't make that determination, Bob.
You need an enhanced video, frame by frame, slow down.
You'd have to have that.
You can't just watch these things on television.
All right.
So if there is any kind of inquiry, that's what they'll do.
They'll have the video and they'll enhance it, huge, and then frame by frame, you'll see.
Then you could probably make a determination, but you'd have to have the officer's testimony too.
And what he was seeing and thinking from his vantage point.
Now, they did that in the George Floyd case.
Remember that?
Minneapolis. As what they did.
That's what the jury saw.
So on the tape, the cop on
Floyd, heard the police
explanation, and the police
got convicted.
That's what has to happen.
Not people watching TV at home.
Greg Jensen, Rockford, Illinois.
I watch you on News Nation with Cuomo and Stephen A. Smith.
You're correct.
I have 35 years
in law enforcement.
I retired the rank of a lieutenant.
There had been many circumstances where a vehicle was driven towards an officer
and the driver was shot.
A vehicle is considered a deadly weapon
when it is driven towards someone intentionally.
And that's a key word.
Intentionally.
And we'll never know what was in the mind of the woman.
I think she panicked, but that's just an opinion.
But that officer was 10 feet away from a big vehicle
that was moving. In a moment, something you might not know. Now the O'Reilly update brings you something
you might not know. It is finally playoff season for college football. What began way back when
as kind of a lark to celebrate school spirit has now turned into one of the most popular
leagues in America. Here's the story behind college football. The first intercollegiate game
took place in 1869 between Rutgers and Princeton.
The rules back then were closer to rugby than what we know as traditional football today.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association, or NCAA, began regulating the sport in the early
1950s. The games were broadcast on radio and television, so big money was flowing into the colleges.
Soon, there were nearly 800 college teams.
Now, the college game rivals the NFL in both attendance and TV viewership.
In some states, universities dominate the professional clubs.
Alabama, Ohio, Michigan, Georgia, Texas, Oregon, and Florida, just in MFU.
The NCAA has a lucrative contract with the major networks for playoffs and the championship games.
In total, elite college teams can generate more than $100 million a year for their respective schools.
But does all that success help the young players?
Not really.
The students are held a few academic standards today.
A report from the Los Angeles Times finds college athletes, on average, receive lower grades than their non-competitive class.
When I was playing college football, we had to hit a grade average or we could not play.
That is gone today. Less than 1% of college players go on to the pros. Most take jobs in physical
therapy, coaching those kinds of fields. And here's something else you might not know.
For the first time, college athletes are getting paid. After a landmark ruling last summer, students
can earn money in two ways, endorsements for their name and likeness, or direct revenue sharing
with the university. Today, the highest player in college football is Arch Manning, 21-year-old
sire of the Manning family, earned $7 million for playing college football. Back after this.
Thank you for listening to the O'Reilly update. I am Bill O'Reilly, no spin, just facts,
and always looking out for you.
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