Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - The O'Reilly Update, June 28, 2025

Episode Date: June 28, 2025

The Weekend Edition of The O'Reilly Update! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Bill O'Reilly here. You are listening to the weekend edition of the O'Reilly update. Coming up next, the news with Mike Slater. Thanks, Bill. Here's what's happening this week in America. Parliamentarian derails. State sued. GE coming home and meteors across the sky. It's all coming up, and Bill's going to be here with your message today. But first, Republican senators speaking out against the Senate parliamentarian, as we reported yesterday, because she took out part of the one big beautiful bill that bans illegal aliens from getting Medicaid. So now they can continue to get Medicaid.
Starting point is 00:00:36 John Thune, the leader of the Senate, said he won't go against the parliamentarians decision. Many Republicans agreeing that they won't overrule her, but they're trying to tweak the language so they can get it past this unelected bureaucrat. Tommy Tuberville from Alabama says she's got to go. He said this is a perfect example of why Americans hate the swamp. Unelected bureaucrats think they know it's better than U.S. Congress. who are elected by the people. Her job is not to push a woke agenda.
Starting point is 00:01:02 The Senate parliamentarian should be fired ASAP. DHS posted a list of illegal aliens who have been arrested in Los Angeles, a sanctuary city. These are people that L.A. has been giving sanctuary too. The list goes on, but a male from Cuba arrested for murder, burglary, armed robbery. A Mexican MS-13 gang member are convicted for sexual assault with a deadly weapon. He was ordered removed in 1997. A illegal alien from Vietnam convicted of 22 crimes.
Starting point is 00:01:31 One Egyptian man was deported after he kicked a Border Patrol Beagle. 70-year-old Egyptian, he's in Egypt right now. The Trump administration is also suing Minnesota to block them from giving reduced tuition to illegal aliens. There was a similar lawsuit against Kentucky, the Department of Justice claiming that the state is unconstitutionally discriminating against American students who are not offered the same reduced in-state tuition that illegal aliens are offered. GE is shifting their production of washing machines from China to Louisville, Kentucky, a $490 million investment, 800 new jobs. The CEO said we are bringing laundry production to our global headquarters in Louisville
Starting point is 00:02:11 because manufacturing in the U.S. is fundamental to our zero-distance business strategy to make appliances as close as possible to our customers and consumers. GE Aerospace said they'll invest nearly a billion dollars in American manufacturing and hire 5,000 new workers. Across the country, 139,000 workers were added to payrolls just in May. People saw fireballs streaming across the sky yesterday in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Believed to be a meteor, national weather service said that earthquake you felt was the result of a sonic boom from the meteor. I'm Mike Slater. I have a podcast called Politics by Faith.
Starting point is 00:02:51 The great Bill O'Reilly, he has your message of the day. Next. 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, newsmakers, and even the,
Starting point is 00:03:19 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. Time now for the O'Reilly Update, message of the day. President Trump is lashing out at CNN and MSNBC. We're saying the U.S. bombing mission was not the success the administration claims. Using anonymous sources, CNN cites intelligence analysts as a source of its dubious reporting. The truth is nobody knows the extent of the damage at the Iranian uranium depots. Say that again. Iranian uranium. That's say it five
Starting point is 00:04:16 times, but nobody knows the damage there, okay? Not even a president. How could he assess that situation? There are no Americans on the ground near the targets, and the Iranians themselves can't go underground for fear the earth will collapse on them. They wouldn't tell the truth anyway, even if they were down there, which they're not. Satellite pictures show huge surface damage and mountain caveans. Looks devastating. But there's no scorecard. So the CNN report is unreliable, no surprise. The merchants of malice in the media don't care what's actually true.
Starting point is 00:04:59 They make their money hating or approving of Donald Trump. It's also tedious, and it never ends. The odds are the U.S. bombing did inflict tremendous damage on Iran's nuke program. otherwise the mullers would be gloating. They're not. They're frightened. So that is the truth. The nuke damage will someday be assessed, but don't count on the American media
Starting point is 00:05:26 to report on that accurately or honestly. 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. Let's go to the mail.
Starting point is 00:05:44 Robert D. Benedetto, Augusta, Georgia. Tell me if I'm wrong, Bill, about the ceasefire. I know it's impossible to predict, but I'd like to know what your gut feeling is. Mine's telling me that terrorists like lepers cannot change their spots. I believe President Trump is a peacemaker and is hopeful, but he's fooling himself. That kind of analysis gets us nowhere.
Starting point is 00:06:09 I don't have gut, okay? I go on probability. The probability is that, yeah, there'll be some ceasefire violations. But I think that the initial foray against Iran was extremely successful in downgrading that terror nation. There'll be a lot of unintended consequences to come. I'm not speculating specifically. But at this point, it looks like a victory for the USA.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Doug Halbert, Mesa, Arizona, as the drum of Republican isolationists gets louder and louder. I think we can take a lesson from 1938-41. It feels like we're watching a rerun of pre-December 7th, 41. Do we really want to wait for Pearl Harbor to wake us up? Look, there was a very strong isolationist movement, particularly against Germany. Japan wasn't the threat that Hitler was, because Hitler, you could see in 39. and he's going into Poland, and he could see him. Japan was kind of quiet and caught us by surprise.
Starting point is 00:07:19 But isolationism never works, as our analysis proves, ever. Particularly in this kind of a world where economic disruption will affect every American. In a moment, something you might not know. With PayPal, I can pay now or paying for, no interest and no fees. Now feature years on this prime cut. on this prime cut musical meat. You can pay your own way. Don't just pay PayPal.
Starting point is 00:07:47 Subject to approval of eligibility fair. Learn more at PayPal.com slash pay and four. Now the O'Reilly Update brings you something you might, not know. The United States is home to some of the most diverse landscapes found anywhere on the planet. But one of the Earth's most treacherous places is in South Florida. And we're not talking Miami. We are talking. the Everglades. The tropical wetland, 8,000 square miles of rivers, marshes, floodplains, beaches.
Starting point is 00:08:21 European settlers, then Americans, tried to drain that swamp for 500 years before giving up. The region is home to 400 species of birds, 100 reptiles, 50 mammals, and, of course, a few human beings. Just 400 people live inside Everglades National Park. The folks reside in elevated houses to avoid floods and dangerous creatures. There are more than two dozen species in the Everglades that can kill you. Alligators, saltwater crocodiles, sharks, feral pigs, poisonous snakes, spiders, panthers, and hundreds of hungry black bears. To tame the creatures, thousands of bounty hunters stock the swamp.
Starting point is 00:09:13 Florida pays the trappers, $15 an hour, and $75 for each yard of snake skin. And here's something else you might not know. The most dangerous animal found the Everglades arrived sometime in the late 20th century, the Burmese python. Researchers believe there are half million pythons living in the glades some more than 20 feet long. It all started when idiots who had a python as a pet dumped the snake in the Everglades,
Starting point is 00:09:49 and that happened more than once, so they made it. But today a new threat is emerging in the glades. Serpents have mated with another species, forming a deadly predator. So-called hybrid pythons taken over. The animals, a combination of Burmese, and Indian pythons are growing in numbers. The snake is faster, heavier, more lethal than its cousin. They can suffocate a human being in two minutes.
Starting point is 00:10:19 Devour an entire deer in an hour. Back after this. Hey, I'm Caitlin Becker, the host of the New York Postcast, and I've got exactly. what you need to start your weekdays. Every morning, I'll bring you the stories that matter, plus the news people actually talk about, the juicy details in the world's politics, business, pop culture, and everything in between.
Starting point is 00:10:41 It's what you want from the New York Post wrapped up in one snappy show. Ask your smart speaker to play the NY Postcast podcast, listen and subscribe on Amazon Music, Apple Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. That is the weekend edition of the O'Reilly Update for more news and honest analysis, please go to Bill O'Reilly.com.

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