Roosh V has made a video so American women can understand all the things they do wrong and embark on a journey of self-improvement.

THE ringleader of a group of misogynistic, homophobic “neomasculinists” is threatening to “find a way” to enter Australia as members prepare for their first real-life gatherings on the weekend — however the Immigration Department says he has not even applied for a visa.

Return of Kings is a US-based international web community for “heterosexual, masculine men”, whose members allege rape on private property should be legal.

The group — founded four years ago by pick-up artist Daryush ‘Roosh’ Valizadeh — plans to hold meetings in Australia on Saturday as part of a series of co-ordinated meet-ups around the world.

Australia is among more than 40 countries hosting gatherings at 8pm local time, with three in Sydney and one each in Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth.

Anyone who is female, gay or transgender is strictly banned from attending — despite the gatherings taking place in public spaces.

Valizadeh originally had not been planning to visit Australia. But he changed his mind when public outrage spread, firing off a series of provocative tweets.

He wrote that he booked a flight to Australia, alongside a picture of a travel itinerary.

“F--k it, I just booked a flight to Australia. See you somewhere there on 2/6. I’ll stay a while, see some sights,” Valizadeh tweeted.

He put a call out to “attractive Australian girls in age range of 18-22” to get in touch and threatened to “find a way to enter” the country no matter what.

He also taunted immigration officials: “Their borders are weak. I’ll get in.”

But as it turns out, Valizadeh hasn’t even applied for a visa and he appears to think he can enter Australia by boat.

“I don’t need to apply for a visa if I’m coming in by boat. The border is like Swiss cheese,” he said.

“I will sneak in to your country, hold my meetings, laugh, and then slip out. Your ... authorities won’t stop me,” he said.

I'll just take a private boat to Darwin from Indonesia or East Timor. I'll find a way to enter. I won't be stopped. https://t.co/CKbXdRLS4C — Roosh (@rooshv) February 1, 2016

Mr Dutton is seeking an urgent briefing on legal options to deny an entry visa to the rape advocate — however he said a visa in Valizadeh’s name had not been applied for.

“Like all Australians I am offended by the reports that I’ve seen,” he said.

“Once I’ve got all that information I can make a decision about whether or not a visa can be cancelled.”

The Immigration Department will continue to monitor the case.

“People who advocate violence against women are not welcome in Australia,” a spokeswoman for Mr Dutton said.

The Immigration Minister last month scrapped the visa of American “pick-up artist” Jeff Allen.

Disgusted Australians launched petitions calling for the Return of Kings events to be stopped immediately after news of the meet-ups broke.

Sydney protesters are leading the charge against Valizadeh.

More than 38,000 people have signed an online petition in a bid to stop the “tribal meetings”.

Protesters want Saturday’s three Sydney events to be cancelled. The petition is to inform the NSW Police Force that “this sort of misogynistic form of terrorism” should not be allowed.

Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth have several thousand signatures each.

The opposition and the Greens are up in arms.

Federal Labor MP Richard Marles took to Twitter to condemn the group.

“Return of Kings are no more than a pack of dunces. Views have no place here,” he wrote.

Opposition Senate leader Penny Wong says Mr Valizadeh should be denied a visa, telling ABC radio on Tuesday: “It is disgusting ... those views and that type of campaigning and organisation has no place in Australia.”

Greens Senator Larissa Waters has condemned the group, saying there is no place for the “violent, archaic and disturbing” views they believe in.

“Any men who are thinking about attending these disturbing events should be aware that not only is their behaviour completely out of touch with the majority of Australians,” Ms Waters said.

The former sex discrimination commissioner Elizabeth Broderick tweeted on Monday night: “The views espoused by Return of Kings are deeply offensive and have no place in Australia”.

“These attitudes from the Stone Age are simply not welcome here in Queensland,” Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk said.

Victoria’s Deputy Premier James Merlino said the police would watch the movements of the group whose views he described as “vile and abhorrent and have no place in a civilised society”.

WA women’s interest minister Liza Harvey described supporters of the group as cowards and Neanderthals, warning local members they would be monitored by authorities.

Valizadeh, put up a post imploring Return of Kings members to “come out of the shadows and not have to hide behind a computer screen for fear of retaliation”.

“Up to now, the enemy has been able to exert their power by isolating us and attacking with shrieking mobs, but we’ll be able to neutralise that tactic by amassing in high numbers come February 6,” Valizadeh wrote.

“Let the sixth of February be a clear signal to all that we’re not going anywhere. We have finally arrived.”

Valizadeh is already gloating over the controversy he is stirring.

I love how I can trigger entire countries and get women clutching their pearls without stepping foot inside them. pic.twitter.com/jI4klcwfNT — Roosh (@rooshv) February 1, 2016

Valizadeh and his supporters describe themselves as “neomasculinists”.

Their core principles include that “a woman’s value significantly depends on her fertility and beauty. A man’s value significantly depends on his resources, intellect, and character.”

They also believe movements like socialism and feminism destroy the family unit, decrease the fertility rate and impoverish the state.

They are against the “elimination of traditional sex roles and the promotion of unlimited mating choice in women (because it) unleashes their promiscuity and other negative behaviours that block family formation.”

In an article on his website, he suggests rape should be legalised on private property and he advocates for dating girls with eating disorders. Other bigoted beliefs include that women should not have the right to vote, that females should be treated like “disposable razors”, that the “transgender movement” is a “horror story” and that fat people are “a threat to the planet”.

I would like to do a lecture in Australia one day. I'd just have to bring a couple extra things to stay safe. pic.twitter.com/CQ1VwGzi73 — Roosh (@rooshv) February 1, 2016

Men attending the Return of Kings meet-ups must ask a specific secret question before they are taken to a bar where the official event will take place.

Valizadeh instructs his supporters that if a “pretty girl shows up and begs to be a fly in the wall”, to just get her number and “tell her to buzz off”.

He also advises they move in pairs or groups using indirect routes to avoid “green-haired female activists or male feminists” following them.

“I will exact furious retribution upon anyone who challenges you in public,” Valizadeh wrote.