Colombia - The Tribal Self Rejects the Illusion of Peace, Unleashing Cocaine-Funded Death Squads

Event Baseline: Cocaine-funded militias are mounting violent attacks on civilians across Colombia, eight years after the 2016 peace accord with the FARC. The state's inaction has allowed armed groups to retake territory, shaking the nation.

The signed paper is a phantom. Thought believed a treaty could erase the tribal self's addiction to violence, but the fragmentation remains untouched. The state and its people worshiped the document as a savior, never addressing the core sickness: the illusion of separate identities that must dominate or be dominated. The peace process was a mechanical gesture, a ritual to soothe the collective ego, not a transformation of consciousness.

Now the old patterns erupt exactly where they were suppressed. The cocaine-funded gangs are the same tribal impulses rebranded, proving that no legal fiction can heal a fractured mind. The state's inaction is not neglect; it is the inevitable collapse of a system built on the belief that force and law can control the shadow. The shadow only grows stronger when denied.

Unless Colombia confronts the fundamental error—that thought constructs the enemy and the self—these cycles will spin forever. The killing will continue, the land will be soaked in blood, and the illusion of peace will mock the dead. The operating system must crash for anything new to arise.