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Sept. 2, 2019 - Roosh V - Daryush Valizadeh
28:35
Babylon Road #11 - Mount Ranier, Packwood, Portland
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I'm leaving Seattle now on my slow trek to Portland, which isn't that far away, so I'll have a lot of opportunity to see things close by.
I am currently on Owen Benjamin's homestead in Washington State in front of his alpacas, Duran Duran.
And I noticed immediately a lot of animals here.
And I asked Owen, how many people do you hire to maintain this, maintain the chickens and the goats?
And he said it's just him and his wife.
So I really overestimated how much work and labor it takes to have the animals and the gardens.
And as you can feel, it's a very peaceful place.
You're more disconnected from the worldly concerns.
You know, the trouble in the cities that are going on, you're more or less immune to that.
And if that trouble comes to you, well, you can arrange a defensive position to make sure that trouble stays out.
And what I see here in Owen's homestead is a template.
He is a God-fearing man who pursues the truth.
He loves his family dearly, and this is something that I think should be modeled.
He puts his immediate concerns for pleasure or whatever things that I have done on the side to pursue the greater good.
And, you know, I hope if I ever meet the right girl, I can create a homestead along the lines of this.
And if the family unit is the best organization for human beings to share their love to be raised up as children, I think the homestead is the most ideal space to do so.
It's something that involves the family.
You're close to nature.
The children are occupied with things besides TV shows and internet.
I mean, you can just stare at the alpacas for an hour or two and not feel the urge to go online, look at porn or whatever men are doing nowadays.
And Owen himself is an intense guy.
I mean, you can, I can see his mind churning.
It's just all these ideas are coming, and sometimes I feel the same way.
I would guess his mind doesn't shut off, and mine doesn't either.
But what gets me about meeting him in purpose and in person is how funny he is.
Like, you think maybe the jokes he's giving you are scripted, but now I can see he spontaneously comes up with them.
So we can be in conversation about a random topic, and he will craft a joke that has me in laughter.
So I'm not, I think that's why I'm not a stand-up comic.
I have a joke every now and then, but his mind can create them quickly.
So that's why he had a career in doing that.
So I leave his homestead with a bit of hope.
A lot of men are in the cities, full of despair, black pilled, stuck in their cell in the city.
But it doesn't have to be that way.
And it's actually not that expensive, not that laborious to have this.
I wouldn't advise doing it alone.
I think the homestead is more for a family.
But, you know, if men are patient enough, if they pray enough, God bless you.
If they, you know, put off their immediate pleasure concerns, I think that this is within the realm of possibility for a lot of men.
And if it's God's will, it'll happen to me too.
So I greatly thank Owen and his family for inviting me here.
And I will keep this homestead in my mind in the future for the type of space I can make if I have a family too that is healthy for them.
So I leave here and onwards.
I thought I'd drive through Mount Rainier National Park to look at the big mountain.
Actually, the big mountain is hard to see with the sun right there.
And here are the little mountains.
But there's still some snow on it.
I don't have any energy for a hike, so I had the opportunity to drive through the mountain twisties.
That was a lot of fun.
So I enjoy the power of this mountain.
Now I go to Oregon.
I'm in
Packwood, Washington.
A rather conservative place.
There was a stand of MAGA hat.
Some guy was selling them.
I bought one for $15.
If this stand was in Seattle, he would have been firebombed.
So here you get way more of a blue-collar feel.
You get a lot of men in pickup trucks.
And since you're still close to nature, it's not a bad place.
Like, this is a place that you could live in.
You just want to keep out the Seattle liberals once they have to leave there after that city collapses.
I was having a picnic and there was a girl with brightly red hair staring at me like I came from outer space and I observed her a bit.
She seemed very earthy and she walked to a car that had a lot of pro-nature bumper stickers coexist.
And I think this is the tree hugger identity.
So people who are liberal-minded but have made nature itself into a god.
So they worship it.
And that's what that is.
I mean, if she couldn't hug me for the night, which she's not, then she's going to go and hug some tree.
I mean, that's what she does.
She speaks to the earth, maybe.
But that's also a testament to no matter how ugly a guy gets like me, there's still going to be a girl somewhere that craves you.
And maybe that's the type of girl that would fit me.
So instead of getting the tree hugger girl to worship nature or the mountain as a god, just hey, just skip the nature, go directly towards God.
I have a real God.
So you worship God.
You can enjoy nature too, but as a way to glorify God instead of making a fetish out of a more material object.
So I'm going to leave Washington now and go further south as I get closer to Portland.
Google MAPS
screwed me.
It put me through the Gifford Pinochet National Forest and I thought I could cut right through.
As I was driving, the paved road turned into a one-lane road, but I didn't panic.
Then the one-lane road turned into a gravel road.
I didn't panic.
In fact, I stopped by the lake, which you saw.
I enjoyed it.
But then the gravel road started getting craters on it.
And it looked like I needed a tank to go over it.
But I kept on going.
And then Google Maps said, make a right turn, not onto a road.
The street sign said trail.
And I looked, it's full of rocks.
I can't go on that.
So I had to turn all the way back around.
It killed three hours.
Three hours gone because of Google Maps.
Though granted, it was my fault because the route said it's going to take two and a half hours going 60 miles.
And if I had the mind at the time to realize it, that's the average speed of what 25 miles per hour.
So I had to learn the hard way.
This is the biggest blunder I've made on the road so far.
But I'll say this.
There was very few people there because you needed an SUV or a pickup truck.
So I think to get away from the peasants, you really need to get a four-wheel drive vehicle.
And then you can go on all these cool places on the mountains where there's not a lot of people.
So that is one thing.
gonna have to buy a pickup truck or an SUV soon
every one of these tools you see here has been set by my subscribers and I've most of them I've restored
So I just hung out with very popular YouTuber Wrangle Star and he has a homestead channel where he talks about life on his homestead and his homestead is which he gave me a tour of is over 50 acres.
He showed me around taught me about the trees how to log and logging is very popular in this part of the country.
He has a very cool wood shop and a workshop and so he's pretty into this and I got a chance to meet his wife and son and daughter.
To me it's amazing how when I'm ready to close the degenerate part of my life God is sending me men to get me ready for the next stage.
So I recently met Owen Benjamin.
I'm meeting him and not doesn't have to be a famous guy, but even on the tour, people are coming up to me and one of the things I look for in men now is their faith in God and love for their family.
And I'm being sent these men.
And you would think that Oh, Ruch talked about picking up girls for a long, long time.
Those are the only kind of men rush only is followed by unapologetic.
Unapologetic fornicators.
But that isn't true.
A lot of family men.
They know of me and they're rooting for me to make it to the next step.
So that's a great thing.
And I got to shoot some guns on Wrangle Star's homestead.
There were a lot of zombies, and these zombies were coming from the Portland area.
So dealt with that.
And as a parting gift he gave me an axe, so a big axe.
I don't know how to use it, but I one day, God willing, I will learn how to use that axe.
So don't give me any trouble while I'm on the road.
But now I'm ready for Portland.
Everyone has said horrible things about it.
I'm ready for the worst.
So let's see what Portland is really like.
Stay safe.
Just a couple nights ago, I had a dinner with four other men.
We were at a standard pub, nothing fancy, just had burgers and things like that.
And then as the dinner was proceeding, transsexuals were walking by our table, four, five, six of them.
I'm like, what is going on?
And every time they walked by, it interrupted the conversation, the shock of what I was seeing.
And I asked the waiter, I said, yeah, is there some kind of special event going on?
And the waiter responded, oh yeah, tonight we're having a drag queen party and you guys can join if you want.
And out of just to see what it was, after the dinner, I did join.
I put on my spiritual armor to enter Satan's den.
And what did I see but grotesque trannies doing some kind of dance or confident walk to music?
It used to be that you had to pay money to see the freaks at the circus.
Now I'm willing to pay money not to see it.
In the room was maybe a dozen trannies of all races.
There was a black tranny.
He was the biggest one.
And they had all these colors in their face with the makeup and the wigs.
And there was an audience there that was supporting them, cheering them on, cheering what I don't know.
And I saw more trannies in that 10-minute span than I have in maybe my entire life.
And you know, a lot of guys who go to Southeast Asia say that, hey, Rush, you have to be careful when you go there because the ladyboys, they look just like the girls.
They're even hotter than the girls.
Well, in the United States, we're not going to have that problem.
You're going to know that this thing is a man.
You saw scenes of the streets of Portland.
I didn't have to go hunting to find this.
This was very close to the downtown area.
There's really maybe four square blocks that are somewhat clean.
And then the rest is just coated in this human suffering, misery.
Many of these homeless, they have severe problems, drug problems, mental problems.
They were young, old.
A lot of women were on the streets, usually men.
I usually see men, but here they were huddled up in large groups.
There were tents.
I remember I was on a street, a normal street in the center of town.
There were two tents and a police officer on a bicycle just rode on by.
He didn't say anything, didn't say, you have an illegal encampment on a public road.
They just don't care.
So this is going to encourage a lot more to come.
But what struck me the most out of Portland was the liberals, the people with the tattoos and the piercings, are in their bars in the patio of their bar because in the summer here the weather is really nice.
They're in the patio of their bars listening to music, drinking, within sight of this homeless problem, this human problem.
And they are celebrating, drinking, looking for sex partners, getting drunk, dancing.
It's almost like this is, they are celebrating what?
What is there to celebrate in the face of this?
When I was walking through these streets, it was hard because I could see the pain in the people for no matter what reason they got there.
This is a sad thing.
And now I'm going to party next to it.
And then if you want to say clean up these streets, put these homeless people in the mental institutions or drug rehabilitation programs that they need, they will attack you.
They say, no, no, they have a right to stay here.
So just like with the bar crowd cheering the trainees on, and now the liberals kind of enabling this homelessness problem, the two go hand in hand.
You don't have the trainees and the homelessness without the allies, without the people who are voting for the political candidates to allow these problems to go on.
So when I was walking on the streets of Portland at night, you see the homelessness and you feel sad and you look close beside them to the liberals drinking and eating food at the cool food trucks and you feel anger.
You feel anger that the liberals did this.
It's because of them and their ideas and the policies and the candidates that they vote into office and the way they shut down those who want to fix the problems, the way they censor those who want to fix the problems.
It's their fault and it made me angry.
But one thing I can tell you without a doubt, as I get to witness firsthand the decline, the destruction of cities in the United States, is that these liberal ideas, liberalism is a disease.
And if this disease has a firm foothold on your city, your city is finished.
This is the logical, Portland is the logical conclusion of where liberalism takes you, where these leftist ideas take you.
And it is horrifying.
It is completely horrifying.
You know, if even if you're, and now once the liberals destroy these cities, once they destroy Seattle and Portland, Denver, Madison, Wisconsin, once they destroy them, they're going to move outwards to the smaller towns.
If your smaller town has a gay flag, just one gay flag, the AIDS infection has begun.
Satan has a firm foothold.
He's going to destroy that too.
So get ready because they can't stop.
You know, they must destroy everything.
And at the same time they're doing it, they think they're good people.
They think they're fixing this world, but they are not.
And it is really sad to see what is going on.
So it's the ideas, the spiritual emptiness that leads to this.
And I can assure you that liberals don't have a solution.
If they're in your town, if they have any power, get ready.
And so it was a good contrast to go to the Catholic Grotto shrine.
It was full of Filipinos and Latinos.
So where were the white people?
I don't know, but I think Catholicism is becoming a multi-ethnic religion.
And the event in Portland, everyone said, Roosh, you're going to get it in Portland.
They're going to shut you down.
Well, no one showed up.
So God is allowing me to do these events safely.
And about 30 people came.
It was a great crowd.
Had a great talk.
So I go to San Francisco next.
That is on Saturday if you want to join.
I hear there's going to be a lot of doo-doo on the streets.
I find that hard to believe.
I have never seen doo-doo on the streets of the United States.
I don't expect to see it there.
So, and Los Angeles is after that.
So, I hope you can join on my tour.
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