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Oct. 15, 2019 - Roosh V - Daryush Valizadeh
23:14
Babylon Road #17 - Waco, Fredericksburg, Austin
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So I'm leaving Dallas now as my boys play in the back seat.
Tom and Bur Tom Stop injecting your brother with deadly venom for trying to kill your brother.
Take a timeout.
Ten minutes.
Don't talk back.
Ten minute timeout.
Kids these days, they're so insolent.
So where was I?
Yeah, now it's time to drive to Austin.
Waco, Texas is one of the ugliest cities I've ever been to.
It may be just as ugly as Yuma.
There are these six to eight lane local roads with shops on the side with huge garish signs.
One shop is rent a tire.
Not a car, a tire.
To rent the rims, you put the rims on layaway.
A lot of pawn shops, check caching shops.
The aesthetic is so unappealing here.
There's not even a center.
I did a walk through the best part of town.
Even the grass is ugly.
Look how ugly that is.
Nearby is the Branch Davidian compound.
This is where David Koresh and his followers died in 1993.
It's a good example of evil on top of evil.
You had a cult, a man who claimed to be a prophet, but he was not.
And he used that, he used the Bible to achieve his sexual fantasies, to sleep around with all the members of the cult.
He impregnated a lot of young women.
So all cults are sex cults.
If you're worshiping a man, you're in a cult, and that man is probably getting a lot of sex.
I hate to say it, but Osho got a lot of wise teachings from him.
But he was the leader of his sex cult too.
He didn't really apply his advice to himself.
So you had David Koresh performing this evil abusing the people around him.
And then the government does what?
And kills everybody.
There's no justice in that.
If he did something wrong, well, we have a court system.
Try him to go and do what they did.
I mean, that what happened in Waco is a sign of what this country is capable of.
You know, it's just layers of evil.
So you had a cult that said they believed in God and a government, which in God we trust, it's on the dollar bills, but I don't think we saw a lot of God there.
Too tired to even go check out the compound.
Today, after I went to the supermarket, I sat in my car and I couldn't even raise my hand to push the start button.
I just sat there.
Don't be surprised if I enter a catatonic breakdown.
It's getting hard to move.
I look at the first couple of Babylon roads I did.
Wow, I was so energetic, fresh-faced.
Now I'm just dragging on this grass.
If God wills it, I will finish.
Still got a ways to go.
So they can find that corn tree.
And then I'm in Fredericksburg, Texas.
Now I know where all the Nazis came to after World War II.
See German flags everywhere, even German words.
I'm in the center square, and they call it here Markplatz, which is a Hitler word for center.
I didn't see any concentration camps, but I did see a couple of rooms with wooden doors, which I think are the gas chambers.
They can gas up to 6,000 people every day.
I didn't see any evidence of human remains, but I did see a little piece of white something.
I think it could be a bone fragment.
So, one of the 6,000 that die every day here.
All the Nazis are hidden in plain sight.
They are pretending to be nice people, polite, clean.
They don't commit any crimes here.
Even the tourists are on good behavior.
I called the SPLC.
I said, I found all of the Nazis that you're talking about.
They're hiding.
But if you come here, it looks like the best place ever.
It's just a lovely place.
This is one of the few towns I've been to where I think you could raise a family here without any of the paws.
I didn't see any gay flags at all.
Just I saw Texan flags, American flags, German flags.
People here seem very honest.
They embrace their German heritage, but they're not German.
They speak like an American.
They dress like one.
But I wonder if they know they were graced by some strong European heritage.
I mean, with the architecture and things such as that.
Even the library building was a beautiful building.
A lot of the libraries they make now are, it's like a McMansion of libraries.
A McLibrary.
Just plastic, cheap constructions.
They don't know if they want it to be a co-working space or beautiful place of books and learning.
So after a miss in Dallas and Waco to experience Texan culture, I think I got it here.
i guess they're doing some kind of art thing but in spite of the beauty of this place there really isn't much for me in the sense of i don't drink coffee anymore so the cafes are are out especially since it's too loud now for me to go there.
All the pop songs, I don't want to hear it.
There's the vineyards here, wine yards, vineyards, but I don't drink.
There's the bars and clubs, the beer, but I don't pick up girls anymore.
They have a lot of souvenir shops, clothing, and knickknacks, but I don't have any room to buy anything.
There's the good food places, barbecue, but on the Wednesday I spend most of my time here.
I was on the fast.
So on the fast you don't eat meat.
So the big cities definitely don't have anything.
But even the small ones now, the cities itself is just a collection of things that I don't do.
And I would say that the highlight of my time here was sitting on the patio of my inn and just watching the trucks roll on by.
Speaking of rolling on by, it's time to hit the road again.
To begin my Austin talk, I crafted a joke.
And my joke was, out of all the Californian cities I've been to, Austin is the best.
So that kind of says Austin in a nutshell.
It's like California light.
It's not as bad as, say, LA and San Francisco, but they seem to have the West Coast model as their ideal that they want to achieve.
I can say one thing about Austin.
I've been on the road for four months and only in Austin have I seen something that I haven't seen anywhere else.
And as I showed you before, it was a steaming pile of doo-doo.
Very close to the downtown area where all the bars are, within a cross street next to a tent encampment.
I noticed a big turd right there.
I haven't seen that anywhere else, but in Austin I did.
So that kind of decreased my motivation to explore the city.
So I didn't see much.
As you can see, I'm not in good shape to sightsee.
Oh yeah.
So one thing I can tell you that I've noticed on this tour is that there is a very strong correlation between liberals and societal decay.
If you are seeing in a city these liberal ideas, this progressivism, this abortion on demand, multi-color here, on and on, these kind of social justice ideas.
You also happen to see human despair, public defecation and urination, stench, crime, just overall ugliness.
And as I saw in the nightlife here in the Sixth Street, they coexist side by side.
The liberals on their way to intoxicate and to fornicate are right by the homelessmen.
They don't mind each other.
In fact, they need each other.
You cannot have one without the other.
Now, some of you are maybe older, you're 45, and you're what you would call a classic liberal.
You're not the same as these young ones.
The young liberals, they take it way further.
Their rebellion against the natural order is way beyond what, say, a classical liberal, Enlightenment era liberal would do.
The liberals of today are a manifestation of the social decay that's going to happen if you allow them to run free.
You allow them to take over the cities.
And another correlation I've seen is that where there are tech companies, the Silicon Valley tech companies, the Google headquarters and the Facebook offices, also you will see the liberals and the homelessness.
If there is a Silicon Valley company headquarters in your town, I guarantee there's probably a tent city in some underpass somewhere as well.
They go hand in hand.
So it's starting to be clear to me where the rot comes from.
It comes from the far-left ideas.
It comes from the technologists that think they are going to create this utopia through code, through programming, through apps, but they just create a human hell.
And this is becoming extremely clear.
What else did I have to mention?
I went to, there was no Armenian church here, so I went to St. John's, the Forerunner Orthodox, Antiochian Orthodox Church in, I think it was Cedar Park, the north of Austin.
And it was nice.
Now I've been to a couple Antiochian churches, so I knew what to expect.
And a few of the parishioners, they happened to know me.
And one thing about the Orthodox world in the United States is it's kind of small.
So if you are in the Orthodox club, then you will be known.
So it was nice to talk to people, but kind of embarrassing too, because at times I just want to keep my head down.
And then you have people who know me, but they know all that I've done and all of the horrible sins I've done.
So I definitely cannot hide from my past.
And I'm not saying I'm trying to, but it's going to get harder to say go somewhere, not be known.
But, you know, if that's what I have to do, that's fine.
And what else was I going to say?
The event, event number 17.
17.
I've been on the road for four months.
And in those four months, I feel like I've aged four years.
I received a couple of gifts.
One gift that a man gave me, among others, is a feedback.
He gave me a feed bag of stuff.
And I thought this feedback was going to, it was full, it was packed.
And as you can see, in just a day, I've made some good, good work on the sugary stuff.
Now let's grab a random snack item and see what I'm going to eat next.
Cashew banana nut clusters.
Thanks.
And I was not paid to show that, by the way.
So after Austin, which was less Texan than Dallas, I am going to Houston.
So if you want to see me at my worst, then please join me in Houston.
What's good is that when you get in front of an audience, the audience, it gives you their energy.
So I'm usually a little bit more lively when it comes time to that.
So you can go to Rouch Live to see all the dates.
And after Houston, I go to Florida.
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