
The lie of the gender pay gap in Uruguay
Ultra-radical feminists impose the falsehood of the wage gap between men and women
The Senate approved this Tuesday the bill "reporting, systematization, and transparency of data on the gender pay gap," which seeks for the Ministry of Social Development to generate, through the National Institute for Women (InMujeres), an "indicator" of the "gender pay gap" in Uruguay.
InMujeres is chaired by ultra-radical feminist Mónica Xavier from the Socialist Party.
It is curious that she is concerned about women when within her own party there are offenders against minors who hold government positions.
This proposal, presented by fanatical feminists from the Frente Amplio in the previous legislature, was approved in the House of Representatives, but was shelved in the Upper House.
In the new legislative period, the ultra initiative was taken out of the archives, and during last week the Senate's Human Rights and Gender Equity Committee approved the bill that declared it of "national interest" to obtain data on the supposed "pay gap."

A gigantic lie
In Uruguay, it is absolutely impossible for a woman to receive a lower salary than a man if she holds the same position, whether in the public or private sector.
In any state agency (a ministry, an intendancy, UTE, ANCAP), the employee is paid according to a predetermined pay scale, regardless of their sex.
An elevator operator at OSE earns exactly the same, whether male or female.
In the case of the private sector, remuneration is established in the Wage Councils, and the employee receives a salary according to the wage award.

A supermarket cashier receives exactly the same salary whether male or female, so claiming that there is a "gender pay gap" is a gigantic lie that can't be sustained in any way.
Constanza Moreira leads the offensive
The communist senator is launching a parliamentary offensive against all Uruguayan men. She intends to establish a feminist dictatorship, attacks, and insults men.
Moreira exercises institutional violence. She uses her legislative position to vilify half the population, all men. It is dangerous for a legislator to publicly express her contempt for half of Uruguayans.
The dirty business of feminism
Those who bring up the issue are the radical feminists who want to impose a feminist dictatorship in Uruguay and create an artificial division between men and women.

The supposed figures handled by the Uruguayan Parliament were prepared by UNWomen, an international organization addicted to the 2030 agenda, and by Uruguayan feminist NGOs themselves, which of course provide false figures to justify their shady deals and public money subsidies.
It should not be forgotten that Uruguayan feminist NGOs receive millions every year from taxpayers.
In a country with a very high tax burden, radical feminism's NGOs collect public money every month in different ways.
Of course, a large part of that money ends up in the pockets of those who run these organizations, who with the excuse of "fighting inequality" get rich with taxpayers' money.
The dirty, dark, and perverse business of feminists knows no limits.
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