Justin Mohn has “been ranting and railing about the government for 10 years now and how they’re out to get him,” a childhood friend told NBC News.
www.nbcnews.com
The Pennsylvania man who allegedly flaunted his father’s decapitated head in a video online waged an unhinged legal battle against the government over his student loans, claiming he should ha…
nypost.com
JM seems to be what I’ve heard described as a “failson”—he wasn’t successful in finding a career of his own (which he claimed was the result of a grand and widespread conspiracy in American society against white middle-class men—see second link above for details
about how he sued the government for making him pay back his student loans!), yet he apparently didn’t have to worry about keeping a roof over his head or feeding himself, since he lived with his parents and was therefore insulated against the day-to-day struggles that are associated with poverty.
“Rebhan had other bizarre interactions with Mohn, including one time when Mohn gave him a copy of a book he had written.
“It’s about him, but it’s not his name” in the book, Rebhan said. “He is a high schooler who turns into a rap star who leads a revolution against the United States government.”
The book was one of seven self-published books that Mohn had on his Amazon storefront; the books were removed from the platform after news of the alleged murder broke. The writings had dystopian themes and referred to the “second American revolution.” One book, titled “The Revolution Leader’s Survival Guide,” includes the transcript of a letter to then-President Donald Trump warning of “a peaceful revolution helped by the author if positive change does not come to America and the world soon.”
Another book, titled “The Second Messiah: King of Earth,” was “loosely based” on his life, Mohn wrote. It refers to a “four-year stay in Colorado” that “caused multiple lawsuits.”
Mohn also uploaded four original albums to Spotify, where he had five monthly listeners, according to the platform. He used social media to promote his music, which included apocalyptic themes.”
More on his laughable suit against the U.S. government from the second link above:
“Mohn had previously filed at least three lawsuits against federal agencies, including the US government, over his student loan debts, online records show.
In one, he claimed that the government “negligently and fraudulently” pushed him to take out student loans between 2010 and 2014 to pay for his education at Penn State University, a court filing shows.
After graduating in 2014 with a degree in agribusiness management, Mohn was “unable to secure a job commensurate with his education or sufficient to enable him to maintain his student loan payments.”
Mohn chalked up his lack of employment to employers’ “perception of him as an overeducated, white male, which led to affirmative action against him whilst providing no benefits,” his appeal of the case claims.
As a result, Mohn was forced to move back to his parent’s home in Middletown Township, Pennsylvania.”