PRESS RELEASE
Henry Herrera: +1-301-801-0608
Email: info@endtodv.org
Dishonest: UN Women Pushes Female Supremacy, Gender Propaganda
November 10, 2025 – In early October, a 5.8 magnitude earthquake struck eastern Afghanistan, killing 12 and injuring over 100. Typical of most natural disasters, no information was available that detailed the number of affected males and females.
But on October 14, UN Women issued a Twitter post that stated, “UN Women urges local and international responders to ensure women and girls are prioritized in the response to the earthquake in #Afghanistan.” The post stated its core demand two times: “We must ensure women and girls are prioritized.”
In other words, UN Women wanted women and girls to enjoy priority treatment from relief workers, without any evidence of greater need.
Three weeks later, Hurricane Melissa struck the Caribbean, killing 65 persons. Again, no sex-disaggregated data was available to suggest greater levels of need among males or females.
Once again, UN Women issued a similar demand: “UN Women urges local and international responders to ensure that women and girls are prioritized in the humanitarian response.” (1)
Preferential treatment for women contradicts UN Women’s mission, which claims to be working for “gender equality.”
Indeed, a review of the UN Women’s Twitter feed reveals rampant bias. Last week the Nuzzo Letter released an analysis of all 499 Twitter posts issued over a one-year period from September 24, 2024 to September 30, 2025. (2)
The study found the UN Women posts resort to a series of propaganda techniques:
- Female Victim Rhetoric
- Alarmist Rhetoric
- Exclusionary or Prejudicial Rhetoric
- Threats and Battle Rhetoric
- Empowerment Rhetoric
- Solidarity and Action Conformity Rhetoric
The analysis noted the UN Women’s tweets are “often inaccurate, biased, contradictory, unprofessional, overly emotional, and lacking in common decency and empathy for boys and men.” The review concluded, UN Women’s X account is “replete with feminist propaganda.”
The domestic violence issue provides a good example. On November 29, 2024, UN Women tweeted, “every day women and girls are killed by an intimate partner or someone in their own family. Governments must invest in the prevention of gender-based violence and support services for survivors.” No mention of domestic violence against men.
Overall, “UN Women’s main message was that women around the world are experiencing widespread victimization, including unequal rights, and that ‘gender equality’ can be achieved only if women are given more money, greater political power, and further protections from perceived physical and non-physical harms,” Nuzzo explains.
For years, UN Women has been urging peace negotiations to include more females, making the catchy claim, “When women lead, peace follows.” (3) But no evidence exists to make such a sweeping statement (4).
To be credible to all parties, peace negotiators must be perceived as objective and neutral. But feminist-inspired negotiators have a not-so-hidden agenda: the prioritization of women in post-conflict settings.
If UN Women aspires to increase the involvement of women in peace-keeping efforts, it needs to stop pushing feminist propaganda, and begin to address the full range of gender disparities affecting men and women in a balanced and fair manner.
The Domestic Abuse and Violence International Alliance – DAVIA — unites 214 member organizations from 40 countries in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe, Latin America, and North America. DAVIA advocates for domestic violence and abuse policies that are science-based, family-affirming, and gender-inclusive. https://endtodv.org/davia/
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