Bill O’Reilly: ‘No due process, driven by fanatics. …’
By Bob Unruh

Witch House, Salem, Massachusetts
Media personality and author Bill O’Reilly’s “Killing” book series has met with much success, selling tens of millions of copies of titles like “Killing Reagan,” “Killing Kennedy,” “Killing Lincoln,” “Killing the Rising Sun,” “Killing Crazy Horse” and more.
They each examine a portion of history in depth.
His newest talks about a brief, and very unpleasant, period of American history, in “Killing the Witches.” It addresses the horrific details of life in Salem during the years 1692 and 1693 when 20 people were executed – after being accused of being witches.
But his inspiration for the project comes a little closer to today.
In fact, today, as multiple Democrat prosecutors in state and federal positions are warring against President Donald Trump.
On the Just the News program “Just the News, No Noise,” he explained what he saw in “today’s deterioration of the legal process and seemingly fading rights of the accused party amid the cancel culture,” the report said.
“That’s why I wrote the book, by the way,” he explained. “[It’s] the same thing that happened in Salem. No due process, hysteria, driven by fanatics, is happening now and cancel culture is a witch hunt.