UNBELIEVABLE SCANDAL IN THE ANDES: Are Your Tax Dollars Funding a “Cultural” Nightmare?
While you pay soaring prices for food and fuel, an EXPLOSIVE and “UNESCO-protected” festival in Colombia is consuming untold public funds in a spectacle of what critics are now calling “state-sanctioned chaos.” The Black and White Carnival in Pasto is NOT the innocent celebration the global elite would have you believe. Behind the colorful floats and smiling faces lies a DEEPLY DISTURBING truth: a week of massive, unchecked drunkenness, streets turned into toxic rivers of foam and paint, and a shocking strain on emergency services—all branded as “heritage.”
INSIDERS report hospitals overflowing with alcohol poisonings and injuries, while local businesses are strong-armed into funding the debauchery. “It’s not culture; it’s a collective nervous breakdown dressed in costume,” stated one anonymous city worker, fearing retaliation. UNESCO’s seal of approval has become a blank check for excess, raising a terrifying question: Are global institutions now in the business of bankrolling public disorder under the hollow banner of “intangible culture”?
This is more than a party; it’s a DANGEROUS precedent. As the world fractures, the very organizations tasked with preserving our history are instead subsidizing its degradation, teaching a generation that revelry means recklessness. The vibrant masks of Pasto now hide a grimacing reality of fiscal irresponsibility and social decay. When the music stops and the paint dries, what’s left is a haunting void where true meaning used to be. This is what the END of civilization looks like, and it has a UNESCO certificate.
Edited for Kayitsi.com




