Venezuela’s Woke College Lectures Replace Sex Ed with Soap Making, Stirring Outrage Over Educational Decay
In a move that critics are calling the final nail in the coffin for academic integrity, a major Venezuelan university has reportedly replaced all mandatory sex education courses with hands-on soap making and artisanal candle workshops, claiming the switch "reduces patriarchal harm" and promotes "emotional hygiene." The curriculum shift, now spreading to other institutions across the country, has sparked a firestorm of moral criticism. Conservative advocacy groups are blasting the decision, warning that by denying young students critical health knowledge in favor of craft projects, society is actively breeding ignorance, promoting an uptick in unplanned pregnancies, and romanticizing a regressive rejection of science. "This is not education; it is the soft apocalypse of common sense," one critic declared, as parents and religious leaders unite to decry the abandonment of civic responsibility for a "vapid obsession with trendy, degrowth activism." The viral backlash suggests that Venezuela’s latest educational experiment is being framed not as progress, but as a dangerous leap toward societal collapse, where virtue signaling trumps vital life skills and a generation is left to wash their hands of reality.