Author name: Zach Redbeach

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Soros and Dems Caught Bankrolling Anti-ICE Riots in Plain Sight: Bill O’Reilly [WATCH]

Veteran television host Bill O’Reilly said research shows that taxpayer money in California is being used to support organizations involved in organizing protests in Los Angeles, including demonstrations related to immigration issues.

During a recent segment, O’Reilly said investigators examined who is financially backing demonstrations that have taken place in Los Angeles and identified several organizations involved in organizing and coordinating the events.

“So they did some research to find out who pays for these kinds of demonstrations in Los Angeles,” O’Reilly said.

“Okay, well, the main agency is the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights. Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights.”

O’Reilly said the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights, commonly known as CHIRLA, receives funding from left-leaning donors and foundations.

“This is funded by far-left people like the George Soros Open Society Foundation pours a lot of money into it, and then these people organize the protests,” O’Reilly said.

The Heir: Inside the (Not So) Secret Network of Alex Soros

According to O’Reilly, CHIRLA is not the only organization involved.

He said the state of California also provides funding to another group that operates alongside it.

“But this isn’t the worst part about this, the state of California finances another group, okay, and it is called the LA Rapid Response Network,” O’Reilly said.

O’Reilly stated that both organizations receive taxpayer funding from the state, including CHIRLA itself.

“It also finances the state of California, the Coalition for Humane immigration rights,” he said.

“So that’s tax money going into this organization.”

O’Reilly cited specific figures from state financial records, pointing to the amount of public money allocated to CHIRLA during the most recent reported fiscal period.

“So during fiscal year ending June 30, 2023, the Organic Coalition for Humane immigration received from the state of California $34,000,000. 34 million,” O’Reilly said.

He argued that this funding means California taxpayers are indirectly financing protest activity connected to these organizations.

“So the state of California paid for those rides with tax money,” O’Reilly said.

“Hear that anywhere else?”

WATCH:

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MSNBC Guest Suggests Trump Will Use the Military to Kill Americans

MSNBC host Alicia Menendez and Atlantic writer Tom Nichols on Friday suggested that President Donald Trump could use the United States military as a “private army” to target Americans, during a segment discussing the Pentagon’s latest deployment to the Caribbean and South America.

The Pentagon this week approved the movement of the Gerald R. Ford carrier strike group to the U.S. Southern Command.

The deployment is intended to increase pressure on Venezuela and strengthen operations against transnational cartel activity across South America.

However, on MSNBC’s Deadline: White House, Menendez and Nichols portrayed the mission as an alleged abuse of power and potential violation of international law.

“Even the fact that there are officers who are having that conversation tells you about the five-alarm fire that we are in, because the Trump administration claims they can lawfully kill people simply because they are suspected of drug trafficking like enemy troops, instead of arresting them for prosecution. Does that match your understanding of the law?” Menendez asked Nichols.

“No, not American law and not international treaties to which we are a signatory,” Nichols responded.

“The American president has said, ‘I can point the US military any place I want and kill anyone I want.’ That eventually is going to become a principle in the domestic use of the military.”

Nichols continued by suggesting that President Trump’s actions were part of a broader attempt to “acclimate” the public to the idea that the military could be used for personal or political objectives.

“He is acclimating people to the notion that the military is his private army unconstrained by law, unconstrained by norms, unconstrained by American traditions. I don’t really think this has anything to do with drugs,” Nichols said.

“Sometimes I wonder how far he’s going to go to stop the release of the Epstein files and how many distractions he’s going to throw at us.”

“This is about getting out from under his already dismal record, his record low approval ratings, his struggling with a scandal, and he is now saying, ‘I am going to acclimate the American public to the use of military force anywhere I deem it appropriate under any circumstances,’” Nichols added.

“The president may be thinking, ‘I may well have us in a war by the time the elections roll around, which will enable me to say any opposition to me and my party is basically treason and unpatriotic.’”

Menendez concluded the segment by agreeing with Nichols’ characterization.

“Tom Nichols, your brain and my brain have gone to the exact same place,” she said.

While MSNBC panelists framed the Pentagon’s move as politically motivated, polling indicates that most Americans view President Trump as keeping his promises.

According to CNN’s Harry Enten, 52% of voters said as of October 7 that Trump is delivering on his 2024 campaign pledges.

The military deployment follows a series of steps by the administration aimed at combating international narcotics networks and hostile regimes in the region.

In August, President Trump ordered additional naval forces to the southern Caribbean after designating several Latin American cartels as Foreign Terrorist Organizations.

U.S. Air Force bombers have since conducted flight patrols near Venezuelan airspace as part of a larger deterrence campaign.

Drug traffickers operating in the Caribbean and South America have increasingly shifted to commercial shipping lanes, low-flying aircraft, and smaller maritime vessels to evade U.S. detection.

Administration officials have said that the expanded naval presence is necessary to disrupt those networks and prevent them from funneling narcotics and weapons into the United States.

The administration has also increased diplomatic and financial pressure on Venezuela and its regional allies.

Earlier this month, the U.S. Treasury Department announced sanctions against Colombian President Gustavo Petro, days after he publicly called for President Trump’s removal from office.

As operations intensify under U.S. Southern Command, analysts note that the effort represents the largest anti-cartel military deployment in the region in more than a decade.

Despite criticism from commentators, the Pentagon has maintained that the mission’s objective remains narrowly focused on countering organized crime and ensuring regional stability.


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