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July 8, 2019 - Roosh V - Daryush Valizadeh
40:23
Babylon Road #3 - Princeton, Valley Forge, Philadelphia
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I'm leaving New York City now and thank goodness.
There's not a whole lot to see between New York and Philly, but let's see if I can find some nice spots.
I went
to Princeton University and that is an impressive university.
You know, I was thinking of applying to Yale for my PhD in Jewish studies, but I am applying to Princeton instead.
Yale is trash compared to Princeton.
I mean, each building looks like a historical artifact.
You know, something you would go to Rome, you see old buildings you don't see in your own town.
Princeton had that.
And the chapel was huge.
It was very beautiful.
I walked inside, I prayed a bit.
I felt something holy there.
And when men build things to glorify God, you can definitely feel it instead of glorifying themselves.
Only problem is the church services are paused out.
You have female pastors, a female runs the chapel.
The chapel itself is like NASCAR where everyone is paying money to have a sponsorship on the wall, on the pews.
So I don't think, I think the most holy time you can experience in that chapel is when service is not in session, unfortunately.
The town of Princeton is just as good.
Went, I did my test at the Princeton Public Library, and what a library that is.
It was huge, modern.
I mean, it's hard to get impressed by a library, but this one was something else.
It felt like a really upper-class co-working space, so it was a little bit sterile in the sense it didn't have much wood or brick, but I don't mind going there.
I mean, my public library near my mom's house has chairs so old you're sunken in.
I mean, to make that library probably cost millions of dollars.
And during the library, they invite you to attend a technology workshop held by a Princeton professor.
I mean, this is stuff that you don't experience this elsewhere.
And in this city, I was the homeless guy.
I guarantee you, people looked at me like, oh, geez, who let the homeless and who bust this single-bearded homeless man?
I mean, that's how rich this is.
You know, I'm really starting to feel, you know, I go from New York City where everyone is living like a rat trying to make a buck.
No one in Princeton is living like a rat.
I can guarantee you that.
And I installed Zillow on my phone just to get an idea on the housing here.
And you're looking at half a million and up.
So, yeah, this kind of way of this way of life is hidden from you.
I mean, you see what the rich in New York City, how they live in their clubs and how they party and in their condos.
But this is something else.
This is, they don't have to live in this condensed space.
So again, I am a homeless man.
I'm homeless.
Please send money so I can live in Princeton.
Take the next left onto Wooden's Lane.
Then you'll arrive at your destination.
Just the
humble shepherd, tending to my flock.
This is Howell Living History Farm near Lambertville, New Jersey.
It's very quiet.
There's not a lot of people.
There is no internet access, no mobile internet.
I ate lunch on a picnic table watching bees pollinate wild flowers.
And then I bought jars of honey from those very same bees.
I saw the bees that created honey I will about to eat.
There were lambs and chickens.
They were a little bit scared of me.
The pigs weren't.
Pigs look gross.
They were filthy, covered in doo-doo, snoring.
But their meat is so tasty.
It's just weird to see the animals that I eat.
Because when you go to the supermarket, you're so disconnected from where your food comes from.
There is sounds of civilization here, but it's mostly the birds, tractors, sound of the wind through the trees.
I think I could get used to this.
I don't want to go back into the cities now.
I got to go to Philadelphia soon, and city after city.
They're all the same.
All these cities are the same.
They just copy-paste entertainment control zones, slavery control zones.
On this farm, you control animals and crops.
In the city, the elites control human beings.
Everyone there just seeks entertainment, non-stop entertainment and novelty.
Entertain me, give me content.
Please distract me from why I'm on this earth.
But on a farm like this, you see nature.
You see the cycle of life.
After my tour, I think I'm going to be so sick of the cities.
I'm just gonna find the most isolated area I can.
Maybe I should eat a little bit less pork because those pigs were really dirty.
How is this town so liberal?
I came here for a small town, Americana, and there's more gay flags per capita than in New York.
Every other store is some art shop.
It was a shop on the main square selling some kind of sex-oriented costumes.
The women look like they rather be in New York City.
It really feels like people who couldn't afford New York City, but they still want that lifestyle.
You see a lot of older, horny women checking out guys, such as me.
It's a shame how they're, I mean, it's such a nice place.
New Hope, Pennsylvania, and then they ruined it, and now there is no hope.
Passed a public library test, at least.
There was a lot of old people, it was very comfy.
But this is a place where a woman who gets tired of living in New York City or Trenton, she finds her beta bucks to bring her down here and have a quaint home and to open her artistic studio because she's an artist.
But no one would buy herself, buy her stuff elsewhere.
I can't live here under
the United States is the most evil country in the world Laku was founded by the Freemasons and they make their monuments in plain sight.
So you know that it's too hot to get out, so I'm just going to film this statue while driving around it.
There it is.
see the horse's butt.
On this July 3rd, 2019, one day before America's Independence Day, I toured Valley Forge, which is an encampment that George Washington used in the early stages of the Revolutionary War.
And here is a pamphlet given by the federal government.
It's a national park.
Let's see what the federal government has to say about Valley Forge.
On December 19, 1777, 12,000 soldiers and 400 women and children marched into Valley Forge and began to build what would become the fourth largest city in America with 1,500 log huts and two miles of fortifications.
So these men used the Valley Forge area to keep an eye on the British who were stationed in Philadelphia.
But it was a very hard winter.
They didn't have meat.
They didn't have a lot of supplies and food.
They didn't have medicines.
A lot of men died.
So what's the most important thing that the federal government wants you to know about this is what follows in the next sentence.
Lasting six months, the encampment was as diverse as any city with people who were free and enslaved, wealthy and impoverished, speakers of several languages, and followers of several religions.
Yeah, Valley Forge was like a modern international airport.
It was diverse and multicultural.
It doesn't matter that George Washington owned slaves.
He loved the various diversity.
So this is the revisionist history that the government is starting to push.
You know, I thought more about the founding of the United States.
Who did they fight against?
They fought against the evil British, the oppressors, the king of England.
Who did the King of England serve under?
God.
The King of England served God's will.
And here, these Americans created propaganda through Samuel Adams.
Samuel Adams was basically the CNN of his day, saying, we're the victims.
The British are hurting us.
Their taxes are too high, even though after the Revolutionary War, taxes were even higher.
So they created this victim narrative that the British, the king who is serving under the God's will, is hurting us.
We need to kill and fight.
So this is a fighting authority, fighting godly authority.
Now, of course, the king is man and he is prone to errors and so on, but he is the authority figure.
And the revolutionaries made excuses, made excuses to fight him.
And who was their God?
Who was the God of George Washington?
It was not God.
It was the Freemasons.
Because if you know anything about the Freemasons, is that they have to declare an oath to their secret society above God.
This country was not founded upon God.
It was founded upon a group of people who wanted power over everyone else and who overthrew godly authority.
This country was founded wrong.
That's why it's going wrong.
Wrong.
Here I bought a copy of the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
And let me read a little bit of the Declaration of Independence.
What are we freeing ourselves from?
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Wrong.
There is nothing in the Bible or the teachings from the apostles that say the purpose of your life is to pursue happiness and liberty.
Nothing.
This is a heresy.
So what you have to understand is that the American revolutionaries were the first social justice warriors of their day who overthrew God to establish a secular nation that has gone on to become the most evil in the entire world.
You establish a secular nation that's wrong.
Don't be surprised if it goes wrong.
Let's continue.
That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.
Wrong.
Their powers come from God, not from man.
That whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it and to institute new government.
Wrong.
There is nothing in the Bible that says if you don't like your country, you can go to war.
Yes, there are exceptions.
You are allowed to fight against authority in some very specific cases.
but what they're the declaration of independence is the revolutionary justification for the wrong that they committed you have to i have to be clear that the united states was founded as a secular country secular Now, of course, they had in God We Trust and so on, because they knew they had to include that.
Because most people, most Americans at that time were godly people.
So they had to throw them a bone.
But their God was not God.
Their God was the Freemasons, was their elite club, that they wanted power, that they used to take power.
The last thing I wanted to mention is that Washington Chapel.
Now, that chapel was created after George Washington, I think in the early 1900s.
And I looked on the outside.
I was like, this chapel looks nice.
I'm going to go inside.
Maybe I can pray a bit.
I went, I sat down in the pew and began praying.
And then I got an instinct that said, Rush, look on the floor.
And I looked on the floor, and what do I see?
A checkerboard pattern.
Checkerboard pattern is the pattern of the Freemasons.
Then I got up.
Obviously, prayer time is done.
I can't pray in a Freemason temple.
There was the coat of arms, and under was Latin.
And I googled what the Latin was, and it said, the ends justifies the means.
Yeah, the means of the Freemasons to get power at all costs.
The end is their power, their glory.
You look on the stained glass windows, I was expecting to see prophets of the Bible.
No, I saw patriots, people, patriots who fought in the war.
This church glorified the Freemasons.
It wasn't a church to glorify God.
I got out of there quickly.
I'm not going to worship, pray to God in a satanic temple.
I'm surprised it even had a cross in it.
So unfortunately, 4th of July tomorrow, and I can't buy into this.
We fought against oppression.
We were the victims.
We were the victims that had to overthrow unjust authority to establish a mostly secular nation that has gone on to drug children to change their sex from male to female.
The gayest country in the entire world is because it started wrong.
It started wrong.
The reason we're in this mess today is because what the founders did, and the founders overthrew God to establish their own power.
Happy 4th of July to you.
The best part of King of Prussia is its name.
Second, you get into the main street, it's corporate-owned.
It's a corporate-owned town center.
The main square in King of Prussia is a fake grass lawn.
It's the fakest thing I've ever seen.
I think the people are fake too.
There were actually people sitting on that fake grass lawn playing, talking.
It's fake.
Corporate brands everywhere.
And then the center is lined by all these highways.
Man, this is bad.
This is a bad place.
I don't advise that you come here.
Stay far away from the king of Prussia.
is no king and this ain't Prussia.
The beauty
of this garden is amazing.
It's like the Garden of Eden.
The rain only enhances the beauty.
I think I'm a garden boy now.
I don't want big mountains or parks.
I just want a beautiful garden.
I went from material beauty, beauty in the urban areas.
I thought pursuing beautiful women was beauty, but it was degradation.
I went from that beauty.
Now I'm moving towards a new kind of beauty.
There's birds everywhere.
I'm a bird watcher now.
Look at this.
I watch birds.
There's a bird right there.
Look at this bird.
There's a bird right there.
Hold on, let me see what kind of bird it is.
Oh, let me load up my app.
Beauty comes to me.
I almost feel like I'm not deserving of this based on the ugliness that I've done.
It's time for me now on my checklist of things to do: buy 35 acres, spend decades to build a magnificent garden, then die.
I can just sit here all day.
Don't need to do anything.
It's not a lot of people either.
Another bird.
There's another bird right there.
So close.
I saw my first ever hummingbird.
A hummingbird.
They say that God made the hummingbird after the angels, how the angels are like.
Glory to God.
Highly recommend Chantelier Pleasure Garden.
You will indeed get pleasure, but not pleasure of things, people, places, sights, tastes.
It's just a natural pleasure.
I've got roads over that lane down there for something.
So my Philly event is complete.
I'm three for three so far.
Only problem is I was shut down by my second credit card processor the day before Square shut me down.
So, now I'm three events in out of 23, and I'm already out to credit card processors.
So, hopefully, by the time you watch this, I will have a new processor up and running on my tour site.
So how is Philadelphia?
Philadelphia is actually not that bad.
It's something like a post-industrial but pre-apocalyptic city that is better than Baltimore.
So that's what I can say.
If you've been to Baltimore, Baltimore, outside of the Inner Harbor, it's a very rough place.
And Philly is better than Baltimore.
So I can say that.
about it.
But you can tell that the glory days here are gone.
There is still some development here, but it's on a very slow decline.
Just looking at the buildings in the downtown area, and it contains architecture that you really can't find in a lot of American cities.
You know that this place was the hub of great wealth, built, of course, by the Freemasons.
But I think that wealth has disappeared, and the city is kind of hanging on through the healthcare industry.
You see a lot of medical schools, a lot of cancer centers, hospitals, and so on.
A lot of doctors and scrubs are eating lunch, stepping over homeless people.
There's quite a bit of homeless people.
Not only homeless that are really destitute and talking to themselves, but the soft homeless, people who appear clean, but are traveling with a kind of hand truck of their stuff.
And so this is pretty, you know, I used to see homeless people as background noise in Washington, D.C., because there's quite a few there.
But I'm starting to see the misery and it feels the misery of what it's like to be a completely homeless person to be in this have-not class while successful people are out and about enjoying life, it seems, when you don't have a job, you're addicted to drugs, you don't have family to stay with.
So it's not a pleasant thing to see.
And if you do live in the city, you really have to figure out how to block that out because if you process all these homeless people that you see every day, it definitely makes you upset.
One thing I can say, believe it or not, that Philadelphia is more livable than Boston and New York.
Boston is very expensive, and the car situation, if you want to own a car, is impossible there.
I mean, you just will get frustrated constantly.
Philadelphia doesn't have a traffic problem.
I mean, driving was fine.
Also, I think it's more livable than New York City, where everyone is condensed like rats.
it's just overly dense.
Um, it's expensive to, uh, so if I had to choose between Boston, New York city, and Philadelphia to live for a year, I'd go with Philly.
I did.
I'd probably choose to live here.
At least it would be cheap.
And the people here who aren't homeless or who aren't in the underclass are tattooed hipsters.
And I don't think these tattooed hipsters would find my presence to be too objectionable.
A lot of the girls here are heavily tatted up.
So if I wouldn't come here for girls, that stage of my life is gone.
So I don't need to worry about that.
And when you don't need to worry about girls, well, a whole cross-section of the United States opens up.
So that concludes the Philadelphia stop.
And I'm going to Washington, D.C. next week.
And then Columbus, Ohio, Chicago, and then Minneapolis.
If you want to join me on my tour, go to Roosh.live.
Hopefully by then, I will be able to accept your money in exchange for a ticket.
But one thing I learned is that now Silicon Valley, they can just shut me down on the back end.
They don't need to assemble these big mobs to get things going, momentum going in the news to apply pressure to these Silicon Valley companies when really all they have to do now is just send a sitting a single email to these companies to get me to get shut down.
So that's why you're not seeing these big mobs, but I rather have a big mob.
It's pretty easy to hide from them, but it's not easy to hide from a Silicon Valley company that you do business with.
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