Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis - The O'Reilly Update, September 25, 2023
Episode Date: September 25, 2023Poll disaster for Biden, impeachment inquiry begins, salt water in the drinking water, and a new world record. Plus, Bill’s Message of the Day, the fentanyl crisis in America. Learn more about your ...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 Monday.
Hope you had a great weekend, September 25th, 2020.
Here's this happening today in America.
Time to press the panic button.
Biden family money.
Salt water in the drinking water and a world record marathon.
All coming up.
Then Bill will be here with your message at the day of a first.
When will the Democrats pull the,
the panic alarm ABC News poll 44% of Americans say they've gotten worse off financially under
Biden's presidency. That is the worst result since they've been asking this question since
1986. 56% disapprove 37% job performance approval, 37% approval. With the economy, 30% approval. With the
border, 23% approval. And the big headline number is, if you
had to vote today, 51% would vote for Trump, only 42% for Biden.
As the House impeachment inquiry has begun, Congresswoman Nancy Mace said that Republicans
expect to prove that the Biden family and businesses around him brought in more than
$50 million.
So far, the House Oversight Committee has found at least $20 million in business schemes
in Romania, China, Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan.
James Comer says he expects that.
number to be even higher because the committee has yet to uncover the personal bank records
of Jim Biden, Joe Biden's brother. We know that he negotiated a 140 million dollar settlement deal
in 2012 between a U.S. company and the Saudi Arabian government, of course, because of his
relationship with the then vice president, Joe Biden, his brother. There hasn't been a lot of
rain in the middle of the United States lately, so the Mississippi River is not flowing.
as powerfully as it normally does,
which means salt water is starting to intrude north
into the drinking water systems of New Orleans.
The salt water is not being pushed back
by the Mississippi River's normal mighty flow.
So the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
is planning to barge in 36 million gallons of freshwater daily.
A woman broke the world record in the marathon.
There's also, there's no catch to this story.
She's actually a woman.
I feel like I'm just used to.
A woman broke the world record.
Turns out it's a man.
It actually is a woman from Ethiopia.
Berlin Marathon, two hours, 11 minutes, and 53 seconds.
Broke the world record by two minutes.
That is a five minute mile.
26, five minute miles.
So go to the track.
That's 400.
Run one lap around in minute 15 seconds and do that 105 times.
Insane.
I'm Mike Slater.
Bill O'Reilly with 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 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.
On this Monday, I am still very upset about the four babies, one of them killed by fentanyl in the Bronx, New York.
You heard about the story, the daycare center.
and then in the center
they were distributing fentanyl
and particles got in the air,
killed a one-year-old,
and three other kids under the age of three
had to go to the hospital.
One may die.
So then we hear the usual hue and cry,
oh, we have to do something
about fentanyl.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And this is coming from the liberal politicians
as well as the conservatives.
Well, Joe Biden opened a board
and that has led to record
amounts of heroin, fentanyl, cocaine, methamphetamine, you name it, streaming across the border,
killing hundreds of thousands of Americans, including babies.
So where's the responsibility that Joe Biden has?
Why isn't that being discussed?
And then you got the no-bail laws.
Fentanol dealers don't even have to spend the night in prison.
They bust them the right out going back to sell in fentanyl.
That's what these people do.
But totally ignored are the drug addicts themselves who buy fentanyl to get high.
And you know what this tells me?
They want to die.
They have no control over what they're ingesting into their bodies.
They could go out in a heartbeat.
And hundreds of thousands of them have been killed over the past few years.
These drug addicts are causing mayhem everywhere.
but they don't care because they want to die.
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.
Now let's go to the mail.
Janice Kidd, Ocean Springs, Mississippi.
Has there ever been a time in our country, Bill, that our government has been more corrupt than it is today?
What a good question, Janice.
Two times I can point to the expansion.
West with Native Americans and the reservations, U.S. Grant's administration, unbelievably corrupt.
Now, Grant himself wasn't, but he didn't provide any oversight until it was too late.
So that was crazy corruption.
And the 1920s, with the bootlegging and a prohibition, oh, my God, that was so corrupt.
Everybody was on a take.
So those two were worse, but we're striving there.
We're trying to get there.
Now, Scott Deloder, Cressville, Crestwood, Kentucky.
O'Reilly's talking boys from Membo and a death of a little boy from Fenbill was disturbing.
I feel your pain and the helplessness that comes with that.
If only you were omnipotent, because that's what it's going to take to correct this and many other tragedies in our country.
Look, all I can do is show outward.
when outrage is deserved, and the death of this one-year-old boy,
outrage was more than deserved.
And it's very disturbing to me that the good people in the Bronx don't do anything.
As I said, it couldn't happen to my town.
Everybody be out in the street.
Jessica Lilly, West Palm Beach, Florida, a great interview with Vavac.
Six-pack Vat.
Okay.
Best interview I've seen in years.
what do you think of him being Trump's Attorney General? Interesting.
Got a law degree from Yale.
Seems to be a fairly tough guy.
He wants order.
Yeah, I'd interview him.
Young, but it might be the right call.
It's interesting, Jessica.
In a moment, something you might not know.
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 Podcast, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcast.
Now the O'Reilly Update brings you something you might not know.
On this day in 1875, a teenage boy escaped from prison in New Mexico.
By his 21st birthday, he would become the most infamous outlaw in America.
Here is a story of Billy the Kid.
The exact details of Billy's birth are unknown, other than his real name, William Henry McCarty.
After losing both his parents at the age of 15, the kid,
turned to crime. He was first arrested, September 23rd, 1875 for stealing a basket of laundry
in the New Mexico Territory. Two days later, Billy escaped from jail by climbing up a chimney.
He then fled to Arizona, making himself an outlaw and federal fugitive. His young age and bold
behavior eventually made Billy the kid a national celebrity.
For the next six years, the kid and his crew terrorized towns along the Western Frontier.
They killed, robbed, and stole cattle.
His crimes earned him a $5,000 bounty, a reward.
He was eventually captured and convicted of killing a sheriff.
The kid was sentenced to hang for his crime, but he managed yet another jail break,
murdering two deputies in the process.
His freedom, however, did not last long.
Billy the Kid was shot dead by a sheriff in Fort Sumner, New Mexico.
In 1881, he was just 21 years old, his crimes re-lasting from age 15 to 21.
Although his life was short, the gunslinger's legend grew after his death.
Today, Billy the Kid is synonymous with the Old West, alongside men like Wyatt Earp, Doc Holiday, Jesse James, and White.
Bill Hickock. And here's something else you might not know. The myth surrounding the kid
intensified because of a new form of entertainment. In 1911, Billy was the subject of one of the
first silent films released in the USA. Since then, his character has appeared in more than
150 movies.
Back after this.
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