
© Roosh V via YouTubeRooshV. Roosh (real name: Daryush Valizadeh)
In terms of well-known pickup artists, there are few people more infamous on the web than RooshV. Roosh, as he's known to his followers. RooshV. Roosh has spent years extolling the virtues of pickup artistry and treating women like crap, preaching a philosophy he calls "
neomasculinity." It's kind of like scientific misogyny with a dash of libertarianism. He has often been a proponent of red-pilling.
Roosh (real name: Daryush Valizadeh) is a popular figure within incel culture, and he has often been accurately described as a
rape apologist. He has written and self-published many books on pickup artistry, including
Game,
Day Bang, and
Poosy Paradise, as well as geographically focused advice books like
Bang Iceland. In 2016, after his multicity speaking tour was torpedoed owing to the outcry over his comments about rape, the
Daily Mail found him living in his mom's basement in Maryland. Last year, his books were
delisted from Amazon, turning him into a cause célèbre on far-right corners of the internet.
Comment: So, which was it: Was he taken into custody, or killed on scene?
He may have died after being taken into custody.
UPDATE 14:00 UTC
Authorities have named the gunman as DeWayne Craddock, who worked as an engineer for Virginia Beach in its Public Utilities Department.
Bizarrely, or not, the VB PD planned to hold 'active shooter training' nearby, the next day:
They're now saying he also had a rifle on him, and that more guns were found at his home.
There's also this description of his behavior just before the shooting: Another eyewitness reported: This suggests they did not hear any gunfire inside the building, indicating that the gunman used the suppressor the police found on a .45.
But then, how did the police locate him by following the sound of gunfire?
The local police chief Cervera has in fact "confirmed the suspect used a .45-caliber handgun with a sound suppressor..."
Here's another eyewitness report, in yesterday's NYT: So yes, there was audible gunfire during the shoot-out - subsequent to the slaying of city employees, presumably - between the gunman and police. But until then, people inside the building had apparently not heard gunfire.