tasty find my arse

I just did... look it's insane :
Mental health in Russia is covered by a law, known under its official namethe Law of the Russian Federation "On Psychiatric Care and Guarantees of Citizens' Rights during Its Provision"; Russian: Зaкóн Poccи́йcкoй Фeдepáции «O пcиxиaтpи́чecкoй пóмoщи и гapáнтияx пpaв гpáждaн пpи eё oкaзáнии», Zakon Possiyskoy Federatsii "O psikhiatricheskoy pomoshchi i garantyakh prav grazhdan pri yeyo okazanii"), which is the basic legal act that regulates psychiatric care in the Russian Federation and applies not only to persons with mental disorders but all citizens.[1] A notable exception of this rule is those vested with parliamentary or judicial immunity.[2] Providing psychiatric care is regulated by a special law regarding guarantees of citizens' rights.[3]
what a surprise... surprising they didn't yet declare bitcoin a mental illness

.
more lol
Despite the 1992 Russian Mental Health Law, coercive psychiatry in Russia remains generally unregulated and fashioned by the same trends toward hyperdiagnosis and overreliance on institutional care characteristic of the Soviet period.[44] In Russia, mental health care is meant to be provided by inpatient psychiatric facilities rather than by outpatient services.[45] In the Soviet Union, there had been an increase of the bed numbers because psychiatric services had been used to treat dissidents.[46] In 2005, the Russian Federation had one of the highest levels of psychiatric beds per capita in Europe at 113.2 per 100,000 population, or more than 161,000 beds.[47] In 2014, Russia has 104.8 beds per 100,000 population and no actions have been taken to arrange new facilities for outpatient services.[48] The number of outpatient clinics designed for the primary care of the mentally disordered stopped increasing in 2005 and was reduced to 277 in 2012 as against 318 in 2005.[48] An average patient's stay in a day-and-night inpatient psychiatric facility is extremely long, 75.5 days.[45] Nevertheless, the average rehospitalization rate in the Russian Federation amounts to 21.5%, and the portion of people kept in inpatient facilities longer than one year was 21.7% in 2012[45] and 22.2% in 2013.[49] Psychiatrist Sofia Dorinskaya says she saw former convicts who have been living in a Russian mental hospital for ten years and will have been staying there until their dying day because of having no home.[50] The total number of the mentally ill registered disabled has increased by 20% over a few years, from 826,036 in 1999 to 1,020,002 in 2008 for the population of 141.9 million in the country (2010 figure).[51]
so that's it... if the russian propagandists don't work it's straight there...
very interesting how they hide those facts...