Person with glasses and large headphones in front of a microphone, wearing a pink jersey with a red print and a laptop with stickers
URUGUAY

The ultra-feminist program Somos Nosotras spreads misinformation on TV Ciudad

The progressive den financed with the money of all Montevideo residents

TV Ciudad is the media outlet most forcefully dedicated to championing the new progressive left. This strength is drawn from the sacrifice of the working people, of course.

Last Wednesday, March 6, ahead of the event where a small group of capricious individuals ridicule women more each year (the 8M march), the municipal channel premiered an ultra-feminist streaming program called Somos Nosotras. It is hosted by radical feminist activist Azul Cordo, who is also a journalist and writes for the leftist rag La Diaria.

Gender violence, femicides, body diversity, fatphobia, abortion, intersectional feminism, and feminization of poverty are some of the absurdities addressed by the empowered women with bangs, every Wednesday, thanks to daddy State.

Uruguayan "sisters" concerned about their Argentine "sisters"

Among other nonsense (such as advocating for abortion), the broadcast last Wednesday, June 4, was dedicated to promoting the narrative of the Ni Una Menos collective, which, commemorating its tenth anniversary, joined the Wednesday march in Buenos Aires.

Graph and text showing a 14.3% decrease in homicides of women and a 12.8% decrease in rapes and other sexual offenses in Argentina, along with the cost of the Ministry of Women and a comparison of sexual offenses between 2019 and 2024.
Official data from Argentina | Redacción

It should be recalled that on June 3, 2015, the first Ni Una Menos march was held in Argentina—a political event that used, and continues to use, the image of a 14-year-old teenager murdered in the province of Santa Fe—and that later spread throughout Latin America.

From TV Ciudad, they contacted Agustina Paz Frontera, one of the founders of Ni Una Menos, to comment on the "brutal" repression that protesters suffer every Wednesday:

"What we've achieved is to fill Ni Una Menos with 'another belly' as well: the empty belly... how much economic inequality has to do with the fact that there is gender-based violence, with machismo, with patriarchy... Putting 'the empty belly' at the center: women from working-class neighborhoods... the working classes are the ones most harmed by neoliberalism. Today by libertarianism, by exclusionary economic models... we don't speak only about female victims. We talk about the problems of inequality throughout society."

In the same victimist vein, she added: "Many social sectors harmed by an extremely exclusionary economic and political model are taking to the streets[to march]... feminists, in the Ni Una Menos movement, coordinate with those sectors to exert more pressure, to be stronger. To have a more articulated message that manages to represent the discomfort of the majority of the population today in Argentina."

Animated character doll with large glasses, straight short hair, and an orange suit with a silver zipper.
Caricature of the journalist | Redacción

The Argentine feminist activist and journalist seems to have a high degree of affinity with falsehood, so she openly added: "The numbers, if we look at femicides, have remained the same. At least here in Argentina."

You may also be interested in this article about the silent scam of the pay-as-you-go system, which analyzes how certain structures benefit at the expense of the working people.

Bullrich questioned the Ni Una Menos collective: it's a lie, the numbers are there

The Minister of Security, Patricia Bullrich, made statements on a television channel regarding the Wednesday march and the security operation deployed around the Argentine Congress. According to her, the operation was designed to anticipate and contain a series of demonstrations called by different sectors, including the Ni Una Menos collective.

In that context, she defended the Government's management by stating that homicides in Argentina have decreased: "Link-related homicides, homicides in the context of domestic violence, and homicides of women have dropped by 14%. We achieved this without a Ministry for Women, without a budget for women, without campaigns that only served the bureaucracy that was there."

Bullrich also questioned the stance of the Ni Una Menos collective and asserted that they don't have dialogue because: "They ideologize the issues. Instead of saying 'how good it is that in Argentina homicides due to gender-based violence have dropped by 14%,' they say 'that's a lie.' Well, it's not a lie, the numbers are there," she said.

You may also be interested in this analysis that debunks the myth to show the real plundering by the State and how progressive agendas feed off public spending.

Not only did they lie, they also showed excitement about indoctrinating girls with gender feminism

The delusion of feminists is extremely concerning. The founder of Ni Una Menos not only lied with total ease: she also claimed to be proud of the impact that her disastrous gender slogans have on girls.

Group of people protesting with signs and placards that say
Feminist march | Redacción

"The cultural change is evident and there are transformations we've achieved that won't be reversed just because a disheveled guy shouts to the four winds, in the United States or here, that gender inequality doesn't exist. We've achieved a cultural change and the girls who are now attending school know it," she concluded.

Meanwhile, the young woman with bangs who "works" at TV Ciudad shared a personal experience: "Regarding what you said about cultural change, I had the opportunity to cover the 8M march in Montevideo for La Diaria. Something that happened to me was seeing many girls who had brought and painted their own signs. When I say girls, I'm talking about five, six, seven years old. Ten years old. They are the daughters of Ni Una Menos."

Then, "moved," she read a message written by a girl: "If at eleven years old I'm here for those who are no longer here and for my future, the happiest day will be the one when none are missing." Shamelessly, she stated: "how our slogans permeate these girls who have been raised among feminists. It's beautiful."

Unconscious or very cunning?

Feminism has no reason to exist and they themselves acknowledge it. They've run out of scams to pull off. From some feminist media outlets, they've pointed out the need to reinvent themselves, after warning about the mistake of thinking "of feminist thematic agendas as a checklist of objectives to fulfill."

However, the demands made by this fourth wave of feminism—where the Ni Una Menos movement in Argentina was one of its triggers, especially in Latin America—are nonsensical. They are a horde of weak females who complain and complain. It doesn't matter about what. The worst part is the damage they're causing to new generations.

The good thing is that their entire narrative is very easily destroyed when the pillar of their entire agenda is attacked: the notion of "gender": words have gender, living beings have sex. Women have dignity, feminists do not.

Finally, you can learn more about the relationship between ideology and public funding in this article about how the Montevideo City Hall funds ideological agendas.

➡️ Uruguay

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