Purple banner with the words "Intersocial Feminista" in white letters and the feminist symbol with a fist in the center.
URUGUAY

The IDB finances Intersocial Feminista with millions of dollars

The Inter-American Development Bank grants millions of dollars to Uruguayan feminist organizations

The Intersocial Feminist is a platform of several formal and informal feminist groups founded in 2017 to support the government of then-president Tabaré Vázquez.

Within the Intersocial, organizations with formal legal status are grouped together, as well as shockgroups that lead ultra-violent marches on March 8, International Women's Day.

The Intersocial Feminist is completely aligned with the radical left. In fact, its leaders are members of sectors of Frente Amplio, PIT-CNT, or FEUU (university students).

Current vice president Carolina Cosse often leads the March 8 marches along 18 de Julio Avenue in Montevideo.

Women at a demonstration holding a purple flag with the text
Feminist march | La Derecha Diario

Funding with public money

Feminist organizations with legal status can enter into agreements with state agencies and thus finance themselves.

This is a corrupt scheme, based on the NGO presenting itself to a state agency, claiming it will develop a "program," "workshop," or "seminar" against so-called "gender violence" or "street harassment."

Once the agreement is signed, the feminist organization begins to receive public funds. The duration of these agreements can last for months or years.

The state agencies that have injected the most money into NGOs have been MIDES and the Montevideo city government, but they are not the only ones.

City governments in the interior also often inject money from taxpayers into these NGOs.

Feminism in Uruguay, like any business, needs money, and that money is taken from taxpayers.

The state treasury is used for funding. This means that taxpayers' money, instead of being invested in security or education, is wasted on gender ideology, which is the ideology driving these subsidized groups.

IDB funding

In November 2021, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) approved a loan of 4,100,000,000 dollars, as well as a non-reimbursable grant of 1,000,000 dollars to "promote a life free of gender-based violence and achieve gender equality in Uruguay."

Uruguay will promote a life free of gender-based violence with the support of the IDB in November 2021.
Inter-American Development Bank website | La Derecha Diario

This operation is the first "investment loan" from the IDB focused exclusively on "combating gender-based violence."

This multimillion-dollar operation is aligned with "Vision 2025 – Reinvesting in the Americas: A Decade of Opportunities."

It is an action plan created by the IDB "to achieve recovery and inclusive growth in Latin America and the Caribbean."

The data was provided by the IDB itself on its website on November 23, 2021.

As can be easily seen, an international credit agency injects money into the Intersocial Feminist, and it then distributes it among its various organizations.

Some receive more and others less, but almost all collect something.

The "feminist struggle" is reduced to a business where taxpayers who pay taxes subsidize them, and international credit agencies also contribute millions of dollars.

Immoral business

The money for the "fight against gender violence" actually ends up in the pockets of those who run these organizations.

Honest Uruguayan women who work every day do not receive a single peso.

Funding, both national and international, is to fatten the pockets of the women who lead these NGOs, who use the rest of Uruguayan women for their disloyal purpose.

Group of women gathered on a stage, some wearing purple clothing and scarves, while one of them reads a document in front of a microphone.
Feminists in PIT-CNT | La Derecha Diario

It is an immoral and dark business based on the lie of the "struggle for equality."

The main leaders of Uruguayan feminism can't explain how their assets increased in just a few years.

There are cases of some who in a short time bought brand new cars and chalets in resorts, shortly after joining the board of an NGO.

Everything is very opaque, dark, and extremely murky.

➡️ Uruguay

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