Based Doc Gluzman, 79, Dead: Triggered Soviet Commies With Truth Bombs About Their Fake Mental Illnesses
This chad psychiatrist got gulaged for exposing Soviet woke psychiatry - RIP Legend.

Another one bites the dust. Semyon Gluzman, the 79-year-old absolute legend who dunked on the Soviet Union's psy-op of labeling dissidents as mentally ill, has kicked the bucket. This guy was straight-up based.
Back in the USSR, if you didn't toe the party line, you weren't just wrong, you were crazy. The Soviets perfected the art of gaslighting, diagnosing political opponents with bogus conditions like "sluggish schizophrenia" – a diagnosis so fake, it made CNN's fact-checks look legit. They'd then lock these dissidents up in mental institutions, pump 'em full of drugs, and try to reprogram their brains. Sound familiar, anyone? Big Pharma, anyone?
Gluzman wasn't having any of it. He called out their BS, exposing the Soviet system for what it was: a bunch of woke commies trying to silence anyone who dared to disagree with their narrative. Of course, the Soviets didn't take kindly to being exposed. They threw Gluzman in the gulag, but even that couldn't break his spirit. He became a hero to the free world and a thorn in the side of the Soviet regime.
Post-USSR, Gluzman didn't just chill. He kept fighting the good fight, working to expose the crimes of Soviet psychiatry and seek justice for the victims. He was a real one, a guy who understood that freedom isn't free, and that you have to be willing to fight for it, even if it means getting cancelled – or, in Gluzman's case, imprisoned by commies.
So, let's raise a glass to Semyon Gluzman. He was a true patriot, a champion of freedom, and a reminder that even the most powerful empires can be brought down by a single, courageous individual who refuses to back down. He didn't bend the knee. He didn't apologize. He didn't virtue signal. He just told the truth, and for that, he'll be remembered as a hero. May his memory be a blessing. Or, as the kids say these days, based and red-pilled.
The left can seethe and cope. We know the truth. Gluzman was a hero, and they were the villains. End of story.
So next time some soyboy tries to tell you that words are violence, remember Semyon Gluzman. He put his life on the line for the truth, and that's more than any of these virtue-signaling clowns can say.
Sources:
* Cold War International History Project - Wilson Center * Hoover Institution Archives - Soviet Documents * National Security Archive - Declassified Materials

