Latin American public education under totalitarian globalist influence

A group of Mexican activists last week united against new free textbooks to be distributed in public schools for primary education. The texts include “gender ideology, equal marriage, and the rights of transgender people.”

Frente Nuevo León en Defensa de los Niños organization called upon parents, teachers, and the public to oppose gender ideology indoctrination in schools. Organization spokeswoman Luz María Ortiz Quintos said: “We want biology, not ideology; stop perverting children,” reported Reporte Indigo.

Coparmex business federation president Gustavo Fernández told El Vigía that the books are loaded with "ideology", adding that they "set off alarms" and "red flags" with their content.

However, President Andrés López Obrador declared that distribution of the texts will not stop: "There is no court order to prevent the books from being distributed," he said.

Argentina last week joined the Action Commitment in a project maintained by the United Nations Educational Organization (UNESCO) in collaboration with UNICEF, Inter-American Dialogue, and the World Bank. UNESCO ‘s deputy director says they are going to "transform education", which “requires a change of mentality that emphasizes collaboration, diversity, and solidarity.”

These allied organizations, promoted by the International Monetary Fund, influence the education sector through a project called "My education, our future" to inculcate "Sustainable Development Goals" in children.

Brazil hosts the Summit of Amazon Presidents on August 8 and 9, marking the first meeting of the Amazon Cooperation Treaty country members, signed in 1978. The topic to be discussed at the Summit, convened by Brazil’s president at the beginning of the year, will be the "climate problem." The summit will jointly issue a document to be brought to the United Nations Conference on Climate Change on November 30, 2023  in Dubai.

Representatives from Brazil, Venezuela, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Guyana, and Suriname, as well as the territory of French Guiana, will be present at the summit.

The Government of Brazil, wanting to indoctrinate children with "climate change," seeks to include it in basic school education. 

Human Rights Watch head of the Americas Division affirmed that "The governments that will gather at the Amazon Summit should show their commitment to the preservation of a crucial ecosystem for South America and the planet by ratifying and implementing the Escazú Agreement," a regional agreement that, according to the UN website, would “guarantee the right of all people to have access to information in a timely and adequate manner, to participate meaningfully in decision-making that affects their lives and its environment."

Brazil is one of the countries that has not ratified the Escazú Agreement. According to Infobae, the objective of the summit is to receive millions of dollars in aid. "What we want is to tell the world what we’re going to do with our forests and what the world has to do to help us, because they promised $100,000 million in 2009 and as of now, we haven’t received it," says Lula.

Soaring meat prices in El Salvador has caused the population to reduce consumption. According to an Orwellian survey called "Less meat, more optimism" by the Center for Citizen Studies (CEC) of the Francisco Gavidia University (UFG), families have been forced to make changes, one of them being to “reduce their daily meat consumption.”

The survey claims that 75.3% of Salvadorans have reduced their meat intake, 40.3% chicken, 32.2% eggs, and 23.5% have decreased their cheese intake because of high prices. 65% of Salvadorans have noticed a "very high" increase in product and service cost, emphasizing the areas of food and health.