Cultcow Russell Greer / Mr. Green / @ just_some_dude_named_russell29 / A Safer Nevada PAC - Swift-Obsessed Sex Pest, Convicted of E-Stalking, "Eggshell Skull Plaintiff" Pro Se Litigant, Homeless, aspiring brothel owner

If you were Taylor Swift, whom would you rather date?

  • Russell Greer

    Votes: 117 4.5%
  • Travis Kelce

    Votes: 138 5.3%
  • Null

    Votes: 1,454 55.8%
  • Kanye West

    Votes: 286 11.0%
  • Ariana Grande

    Votes: 609 23.4%

  • Total voters
    2,604
Exactly, so he will live his days blissfully unaware about how much of a loser he is, that his narcissism will keep him alive and in his little headspace bubble full of popstars in maid outfits polishing his Grammy's while he is scrubbing Walmart toilets
And with each failed scheme, he'll still be convinced that THIS is the one that will make all his dreams come true. He's convinced that all he has to do is just convince a judge that Taylor Swift is a big meanie for telling him no and the judge will award him all her money and order her to be his sex slave.
 
If he went on an actual date that didn't end in sex, he'd probably sue for breach of contract. He views relationships as transactional after all, so it's no stretch to assume he'd expect sex if he paid for dinner.

If he sued and got to fuck them, he'd sue again because they didn't swallow. Then again because they didn't moan enough. Again because they didn't tell him they loved him after.

Russ is blissfully unaware that his plights are a fuel for him. If he got everything he wanted, it would be hollow. He is so rarely ever really pleased. Everything he does, even if it goes his way, is flawed. Nothing in real life will ever live up to insane daydreams. When they don't, he flies into a rage and wants to force people, against their will, to live out his fantasies. He feels entitled to have all his wishes granted without consequence or effort.

Part of his love for hookers isn't that they are 9s and 10s but because they are pawns who must act a certain way. That's why he wants to GFE, it's a relationship he can control. It's why he sues, it's why he threatens and whines, it's why he leaves negative reviews everywhere he goes. Chris Chan deals with by wearing a unicorn horn and rocks, calling himself a Goddess who lives in another dimension. Russ wants to scare people to be his puppets so his fantasy life will come true.
 
Even if he has a normal libido, the fact that he puts THIS MUCH importance in sex and how he sees it as a weapon to make other people jealous is horrifying. Because as a lot of people have said, nobody gives a fuck about your sex life or if you're banging hookers or not. Russ ruining his life because of a perceived idea of sex being the ultimate sign of success is hilarious.
 
Even if he has a normal libido, the fact that he puts THIS MUCH importance in sex and how he sees it as a weapon to make other people jealous is horrifying. Because as a lot of people have said, nobody gives a fuck about your sex life or if you're banging hookers or not. Russ ruining his life because of a perceived idea of sex being the ultimate sign of success is hilarious.
Or maybe this is the only way Russ can feel normal. When you look as repulsive as he does then the idea of being with a moderately attractive woman is a win even if you are paying for the privilege.
 
Or maybe this is the only way Russ can feel normal. When you look as repulsive as he does then the idea of being with a moderately attractive woman is a win even if you are paying for the privilege.
I agree with what other Kiwis have said: sex only exists as a means to an end for Russell. He wants control; women, in his mind, exist to cater to his every whim and stroke his colossal ego.
And with each failed scheme, he'll still be convinced that THIS is the one that will make all his dreams come true. He's convinced that all he has to do is just convince a judge that Taylor Swift is a big meanie for telling him no and the judge will award him all her money and order her to be his sex slave.
The funniest, and saddest, part in all of this is that Rusty will likely go to his grave still believing success is right around the corner, that his day is within reach.
 
I think it's his way of trying to convince others "See, SOMEONE will touch me my pee pee!" Except like others have said, no1curr because we all have more important things to do and worry about. Hopefully the court ordered therapy unpacks some of this, but I'm doubtful it will help at all since Russhole is so bad, he really needs isolation and intense therapy for more than a year for any expectation of results.
 
As for Russ “enslaving” Taytay, I believe the quote from him was that she would “be his maid.”
Okay not quite as bad of phrasing as i expected but still pretty awful. He makes it really clear that his intent is to force her and that he wants it to be degrading for her. He just seems like the sort that would want other people to suffer as much as possible just because his feelings are hurt and it has to be someone elses fault. If he were less repulsive he would be capable of doing some seriously abusive shit
 
I think it's his way of trying to convince others "See, SOMEONE will touch me my pee pee!" Except like others have said, no1curr because we all have more important things to do and worry about. Hopefully the court ordered therapy unpacks some of this, but I'm doubtful it will help at all since Russhole is so bad, he really needs isolation and intense therapy for more than a year for any expectation of results.
I don't know how effective therapy will be. He's convinced there's nothing wrong with him, which is probably why he was resistant to the treatment in the first place. A therapist will have an uphill climb to convince him he needs help at all.
Okay not quite as bad of phrasing as i expected but still pretty awful. He makes it really clear that his intent is to force her and that he wants it to be degrading for her. He just seems like the sort that would want other people to suffer as much as possible just because his feelings are hurt and it has to be someone elses fault. If he were less repulsive he would be capable of doing some seriously abusive shit
His behavior speaks to the idea that he thinks people who deny him what he wants are evil and must be punished.
 
His behavior speaks to the idea that he thinks people who deny him what he wants are evil and must be punished.
Exactly. I think his thought process would be more like that they'd only understand his suffering if they suffer too, after that they would totally understand him and fall madly in love and they throw each other an eternal pity party
 
He just thinks of himself as the underdog/loser in a movie
I got this exact feeling when reading his book. He talks as if he was in a movie, like he was a character down to his luck, but in a twist of fate, he was quickly catapulted to fame by simply running into a female celebrity while scrubbing toilets and making her laugh with a silly janitor joke. He really believes life is a big movie and he's the sole star.
He literally believes that ''showing how you care about a famous female by going through hardships and putting on hard work'' would be enough to everyone and all the world would finally see how disciplined and humble he really is and finally give him the fruits he worked so hard for.

This is typical movie script 101.
 
I don't know how effective therapy will be. He's convinced there's nothing wrong with him, which is probably why he was resistant to the treatment in the first place. A therapist will have an uphill climb to convince him he needs help at all.

His behavior speaks to the idea that he thinks people who deny him what he wants are evil and must be punished.
It's the same pattern as Jonathan Yaniv. Russ is just a few steps ahead. Yaniv will eventually follow suit.
 
Hopefully the court ordered therapy unpacks some of this, but I'm doubtful it will help at all since Russhole is so bad, he really needs isolation and intense therapy for more than a year for any expectation of results.
The court didn't order therapy, but rather an evaluation. When he sees the shrink, it won't be for Russell's benefit, but rather so the court has an expert opinion on his mental state as part of official record.

The therapist he sees will already know that he's been convicted of electronic harassment against a woman, and that there were circumstances surrounding his case that warranted a psych eval order (because most first-time harassment convictions of somebody with no prior criminal record* will not require a psych eval).

The therapist will review court documents, and may reach some tentative conclusions prior to meeting with Russell in person. Thus, any questions they ask Russell won't be to encourage self-reflection, but to better understand his thought processes in light of the actions that got him convicted and ordered to undergo a psych eval in the first place. They'll know he's a fuckup with mental issues, but the goal is to determine what flavor his particular mental issues are, and whether he is likely to re-offend or escalate his behaviors.

*Yes, there's the "kill list" incident from high school, but IIRC that was sealed, due to being a first offense, his age, and extenuating circumstances. It wasn't showing up on background checks when he was still getting paralegal jobs, and the judge at the Ogden City court may not have known about it. I wonder if that is the "disturbing" piece of information Erika's attorney provided the court to get a psych eval ordered.
 
*Yes, there's the "kill list" incident from high school, but IIRC that was sealed, due to being a first offense, his age, and extenuating circumstances. It wasn't showing up on background checks when he was still getting paralegal jobs, and the judge at the Ogden City court may not have known about it. I wonder if that is the "disturbing" piece of information Erika's attorney provided the court to get a psych eval ordered.

Erika's attorney Summers was very specific in his answer to the judge's question on whether Russ had any prior criminal history. I don't have the exact quote, but from my memory of it, Summers said Russ had no criminal history in the state of Utah as an adult that was usable in that court. I don't know if it's normal for prosecuting attorneys to be that specific in their answer to that question, but to me it implied that Erika's team knew about the "senior prank".
 
Erika's attorney Summers was very specific in his answer to the judge's question on whether Russ had any prior criminal history. I don't have the exact quote, but from my memory of it, Summers said Russ had no criminal history in the state of Utah as an adult that was usable in that court. I don't know if it's normal for prosecuting attorneys to be that specific in their answer to that question, but to me it implied that Erika's team knew about the "senior prank".
FYI Summers is the state prosecutor, not Erika's lawyer, that would be Ms. Mena.
 
He just thinks of himself as the underdog/loser in a movie where he will suddenly get an opportunity to reach success.
I think this is the key to interpreting a lot of the absurd, obviously fictional details in Russell's book, for instance the part where he arrives at Radio Shack to get an HDMI cable, describing himself literally skidding to a halt and announcing, "You have arrived at your destination!" like a car GPS. It makes sense if you look at it as a scene from an underdog film, where Russell would be the lovably fallible but scrappy hero. In such a film, you'd sympathize with the main character's setbacks, rather than dismissing them as the bumbling of an incompetent idiot.

Edit: I see @DrainRedRain beat me to the punch, making pretty much the exact same point.
 
I don't know how effective therapy will be. He's convinced there's nothing wrong with him, which is probably why he was resistant to the treatment in the first place. A therapist will have an uphill climb to convince him he needs help at all.

His behavior speaks to the idea that he thinks people who deny him what he wants are evil and must be punished.

Hence my (although unrealistic expectation) for isolation and extended (a year or more) of therapy.
Two of my favorite books which are out of print (you can buy on Amazon used) are Cold Storage by Wendell Rawls Jr. and The Shoeleather Treatment by L. Stebel. Both books cover the old Farview Hospital for the Criminally Insane located in Waymart PA. It's called FCI Waymart these days and mostly sex offenders are housed there. If memory serves me right, it was where Nick Bate was housed for a bit.

My point with this is Farview was intended for people like Russhole--with good intentions. Farview was meant to reflect comfortable home living with close concerned community in the countryside near Scranton. The idea was recovery centered around the patient that would restore him and prepare him to re-integrate into the community free of distractions. Sadly, it did not turn out this way as it became a warehouse and defacto political prison that was broken up in the Regan Administration. Russhole could've benefitted from this type of intense treatment, but staff and politicians abused the institutions and the patients' rights. The only options now are the streets or prison--both unqualified to deal with conditions like butternut's. Unfortunately women have to suffer the consequences of this.
 
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