Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - The O'Reilly Update, June 10, 2023
Episode Date: June 10, 2023The weekend edition of The O'Reilly Update! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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Bill O'Reilly here.
You are listening to the weekend edition of the O'Reilly update.
Coming up next, the news with Mike Slater.
Thank you, Bill.
Here's what's happening this week in America.
Donald Trump indicted again.
China and Cuba, Biden's big pride party,
and Jack Daniels wins in the Supreme Court.
All coming up, then Bill here with your message of the day.
First, Donald Trump indicted again.
The Department of Justice, preparing to ask.
ask a grand jury to indict Trump for violating the Espionage Act and for obstruction of justice.
Ooh, those sounds so terrible.
Section 793 prohibits gathering, transmitting, or losing any information respecting the national defense.
So Biden's Department of Justice is going to charge Trump with a crime for doing the same thing that Biden himself did.
The prosecutors are charging him with a crime that gets around the fact that he as president can declass
classify whatever documents he wants.
This law has nothing to do with whether or not the documents were classified or not classified.
And it's all because the Trump derangement syndrome is so deeply infested in their souls,
they will do anything to take him down.
And they'll never get it, that this only makes him stronger.
At least it always has.
Well, this one too.
The chief election and campaign correspondent for CBS News says this is a grave, serious case in the eyes of many law enforcement sources.
Those who know Jack Smith, the special counsel, say he would never bring charge.
of this nature unless he had tons of testimony and evidence and is convinced he will win.
We'll see.
Cuba may allow China to establish a spying facility in Cuba to conduct surveillance on the United
States.
It's one thing to have satellite surveillance or even spy balloons floating overhead,
but having a Chinese outpost 100 miles from our coast, that seems next level, but
they see weakness.
Joe Biden hosted the largest pride event in White House history last night, celebrating
LGBTQ plus families.
Biden also announced a new book banning czar
who will oversee all the book bans
that have occurred in America.
And just to be clear, there are no book bans in America.
Not a single one.
No books have been banned.
These are sexually explicit books
which some parents think are inappropriate
for third graders.
But that is not banning a book.
Far from it that the left is hyperventilating about.
In Supreme Court news, the Supreme Court sided with Jack Daniels in a dispute over a dog toy.
So this company made a dog toy that looks like a Jack Daniels bottle, but it says bad Spaniels.
And instead of promising 40% alcohol by volume, it promises 43% poo by volume, 100% smelly.
A lower court said this is parody, does not violate copyright laws.
And the Supreme Court said, yes, it does.
Bill O'Reilly will be here with your message of the day.
Hey, next.
Hey, I'm Caitlin Becker, the host of the New York Postcast,
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Time now for the O'Reilly Update, message of the day.
Veteran conservative columnist Cal Thomas is scorching Donald Trump in a new article
saying the former president's continued political odyssey will destroy the Republican Party
as well as the right wing in America.
Mr. Thomas quotes a variety of conservative pundits who believe the same thing.
Now, I've known Cal Thomas for decades, and he is an honest analyst.
entitled to espouse whatever he wants.
He writes that he did vote for Trump
because he considered the alternatives worse,
but is now off that Trump trained for good
because of the former president's polarizing personality.
So my question for Cal is this,
would you really pull the lever or lick the envelope
for Joe Biden if he's Trump's opponent in 2024?
That would be very destructive for traditional America,
which Mr. Biden apparently disdains.
Yes, Donald Trump is not a doctrinaire conservative.
He has no interest in political philosophy.
He's a dealmaker and governed that way.
And in my opinion, was far more successful in creating American prosperity than Joe Biden has been.
There are two immediate dangers to conservatives.
First, the woe culture is on to march.
And if you oppose it, as most conservatives do, you are evil.
and should be punished.
The second is that Biden is weak,
and America's standing in the world is weakening
that puts the country in peril.
So, whether you like Trump or not, that's the situation.
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, if you wish to opine.
All right, here is the mail.
We go to David.
Bill, I completely agree with your warning
that we shouldn't convict President
Biden without knowing on the facts. The three-ringed circus of the Trump-Russia collusion fraud
is a perfect example of why we shouldn't get ahead of ourselves. Okay, we want our viewers and
listeners on the radio to be fair. And most of them are. Laura, thank you for defending Biden's
unfortunate trip over the sandbag could have happened to anyone. Easier for him, however,
because he's a constant state of bumbling. It is true, he is a diminished man. There's no
question about that. Robert, the rule of law has been destroyed by the FBI and the current Justice
Department. The mass media will protect Joe Biden and corruption until our country is totally
destroyed. Unfortunately, that's true. Let's hope in 24 we can reverse this insanity.
John Coletto, thanks for reminding us that Eric Holder was held in contempt of Congress.
My question, in 2025, could a Republican administration prosecute Christopher Ray? No. He is indemnification.
prosecution, prosecutorial discretion.
Bill Forrest Woodbridge, Virginia, I saw a delusional James Comey on TV the other day, praised
Biden and now the government should be honest and fight corruption.
Look, Comey, everyone knows who's fair-minded, what Comey is.
I think it's MSNBC, is hard to think.
I don't know.
It's insane, but we all know.
Bill Frazier at Locust Grove.
I grew up on Long Island, too, and was water safety.
instructor for the town of Babylon in the early 70s. We just missed each other, Bill. I enjoy the
no-spin news, but my mother loves you. She is 93 and was a water safety instructor herself.
Can you give her a shout out, Natalie Frazier? Good for you, Natalie, and your son is a good guy.
So you're a great mom. That goes together. Natalie was a water safety instructor, and she's 93.
God bless you. In a moment. Something you might.
Not no.
Hey, it's Sean Spicer from the Sean Spicer Show podcast, reminding you to tune into my show
every day to get your daily dose inside the world of politics.
President Trump and his team are shaking up Washington like never before, and we're here
to cover it from all sides, especially on the topics the mainstream media won't.
So if you're a political junkie on a late lunch or getting ready for the drive home, new
episodes of the Sean Spicer Show podcast drop at 2 p.m. East Coast every day.
Make sure you tune in.
You can find us at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast.
Now, the O'Reilly Update brings you something you might not know.
19 years ago, President Ronald Reagan died at his home in Southern California.
The 93-year-old lived an extraordinary life that began in Hollywood and culminated with two terms in the White House.
Here is the story.
Born February 6, 1911 in Illinois, young Ron.
began acting in high school.
He moved to Hollywood in 1937, where he got a job as an extra for Warner Brothers.
He soon landed major roles in films like Dark Victory, Storm Warning, and The Killers.
After World War II, Reagan served as president of the Screen Actors Guild, waging a public campaign
against communist infiltrators in Hollywood.
a handful of box office bombs, Ronald Reagan pivoted to politics. He was elected the governor
of California in 1966, where he served until 1975. Four years later, the popular Republican
announced his campaign for the White House. He won the 1980 race with an electoral landslide
489 to 49. President Jimmy Carter carried just five states. To
Two months after his inauguration, Reagan barely survived an assassination attempt.
Four years later, he won re-election by an even larger margin, 525 electoral votes for Reagan,
13 for Walter Mondale.
After two terms in office, Reagan, known as the Gipper, led the USA out of record high inflation,
rebuilt the military, and launched an arms race with Russia that ultimately destroyed
the Soviet Union, which was what Russia was called then. The president died in 2004 after a 10-year
battle with Alzheimer's. And here's something else you might not know. Ronald Reagan's nickname
originated long before his career in politics. Back in 1940, the actor appeared in a film
called All-American playing the ill-fated football star George Gipp. The injured athlete asked his
college teammates to win a critical game in his honor. Ronald Reagan's famous line,
win one for the Gipper. Back after this.
Power, politics, and the people behind the headlines. I'm Miranda Devine, New York Post columnist,
and the host of the brand new podcast, Podforce One. Every week, I'll sit down for candid
conversations with Washington's most powerful disruptors, lawmakers,
lawmakers, and even the president of the United States.
These are the leaders shaping the future of America and the world.
Listen to Podforce One with me, Miranda Devine, every week on Apple Podcasts, Spotify,
or wherever you get your podcast.
You don't want to miss an episode.
That is the weekend edition of the O'Reilly.
update, no spin, just facts. We are always looking out for you.