Adela Micha accuses El Temach of promoting hatred towards women in social networks
In an interview on 'La Saga', Adela Micha questioned the content created by the influencer and recalled the violent reality faced by thousands of women.
Adela Micha did not remain silent and confronted the influencer El Temach on the interview show 'La Saga'. During the debate, the presenter accused him of inciting violence against women through his social media posts.
The exchange quickly became a trend on digital platforms. The climax of the discussion came when Micha directly confronted El Temach over one of his most viral — and criticized — phrases: “We had to live in a generation of shameful women.”
The presenter bluntly questioned the intention behind the term, pointing out that, beyond provocation, the generalization is dangerous and degrading.
“Why do you say that women are shameful, but I didn’t hear you say ‘we live in a shameful generation’?” Micha retorted firmly, highlighting what she considers a double standard in the influencer’s speech.
El Temach defends himself
El Temach, for his part, tried to defend himself by arguing that his The phrase is not intended to belittle women, but rather to reflect a shared social reality: “Men are also shameful. Why are we scared when I say that about women and not when I say it about men? It would be sexist if only men were shameful,” she stated.
Far from accepting the justification, Adela Micha deepened her criticism, recalling the harsh reality faced by millions of women: violence, discrimination, femicides, and structural inequality.
“I don’t know what world you live in that you say women are treated like glass. If they treat us like shame, using your language, if they kill them, if they rape them, if they discriminate against them… It’s not proportional, really,” she responded forcefully, emphasizing that language is not innocent and that phrases like El Temach’s can normalize violent attitudes.
When the influencer suggested that women “put up with” that type of content because they are strong, Micha interrupted him: “They endure, they endure that and more.”But she made it clear that female strength should not be an excuse to justify verbal or symbolic abuse.
New masculinity or toxic discourse?
El Temach took advantage of the space to talk about what he calls the “new masculinity,” arguing that men should also allow themselves to be vulnerable and emotional without being judged. “What I'm saying is not that I convinced men to think this way... it's what they think, but they don't dare to say it in public,” he stated.
However, Micha did not allow the focus to stray: “The discussion about men should not overshadow the structural problem that women face,” she noted, recalling that while the debate about male expression is ongoing, thousands of women continue to be victims of sexist violence in Mexico and Latin America.
Adela Micha not only questioned an influencer; He put his finger on a systemic problem: the trivialization of symbolic violence against women. And although El Temach insists that his discourse is "not sexist," the effect it has on many audiences—especially young people—deserves deep reflection.

