CULTURAL PRESERVATION ENGINE™
The Cultural Preservation Engine™
Finesse De La Viton (FDLV)
© 2025 Finesse De La Viton. All rights reserved.
Hero Section — Visionary Introduction
Culture is more than memory.
Culture is more than performance.
Culture is more than entertainment.
Culture is identity.
Culture is sovereignty.
Culture is wealth.
Culture is survival.
For centuries, the Caribbean has created rhythms, languages, designs, and philosophies that shaped the world—yet the architects of this culture have remained invisible, undervalued, and unprotected.
The Cultural Preservation Engine™ is FDLV’s response. A system, a philosophy, and a movement built to restore power, agency, and equity to the creators themselves.
This is not preservation alone.
This is heritage as living, protected, empowered infrastructure.

About Section — The Birth of the Engine
The Engine did not arrive on paper.
It did not wait for permission.
It came from thought, observation, ancestral echo, and necessity.
The Caribbean has always exported culture—but rarely retained control. Music, festivals, languages, culinary mastery, and art traveled globally, while their creators watched without ownership, without equity, without a seat at the table.
The Cultural Preservation Engine™ exists to rewrite this reality:
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Communities reclaim authority over their cultural production
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Traditions generate sustainable economic impact
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Heritage becomes globally recognized intellectual property
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Cultural identity is protected, amplified, and respected
FDLV is not a company that merely participates in culture.
FDLV is a platform for culture to protect itself, to generate its own value, and to ensure the creators inherit their legacy.

Mission Section — Why the Engine Exists
The Engine exists to solve three critical global problems:
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Exploitation: Culture is consumed without consent.
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Erosion: Identity is diluted, languages die, and traditions are lost.
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Extraction: Global markets monetize cultural production while excluding creators.
By directly addressing these challenges, the Engine:
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Empowers communities as stakeholders in cultural economies
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Protects cultural practices through legal, digital, and economic safeguards
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Establishes measurable outcomes for global recognition, economic equity, and social justice
Mission Statement:
To reclaim, protect, and amplify cultural identity by creating systems where heritage is honored, originators are compensated, and culture itself drives sustainable social and economic power.

Vision Section — Where We Are Going
The vision of the Cultural Preservation Engine™ is transformative:
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The Caribbean becomes a global leader not only in cultural production but in cultural policy and ownership
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Every creator, from musician to artisan to ritual custodian, becomes a shareholder in their own heritage
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Culture itself becomes a renewable asset class, a driver of GDP, education, and international equity
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Nations negotiate globally with narrative equity, not dependency
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Culture is no longer a borrowed commodity—it is distributed power, universally respected and protected
We do not ask for recognition.
We demand impact through action.

Legacy Section — The Stakes of Inaction
Failure to protect culture has consequences:
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AI and technology will appropriate it without consent
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Corporations will monetize it without responsibility
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Tourism will consume it without ethical redistribution
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History will remember artifacts but forget the artisans
The cost of inaction is cultural erasure, economic loss, and generational dispossession.
The Cultural Preservation Engine™ ensures:
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Heritage is living and legally safeguarded
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Traditions are economically and socially empowered
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Communities gain control, visibility, and agency
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Cultural impact is measurable and globally recognized

Authority Section — The Founder’s Declaration
I am Tronnel Finesse A. Pacquette.
I built FDLV and the Cultural Preservation Engine™ not for fame or recognition, but because history demanded it, ancestry demanded it, and identity demanded it.
Every song, every festival, every ritual, every language, every craft holds power.
Power that must return to its origin.
Power that sustains communities.
Power that generates wealth, influence, and sovereignty.
I claim this not because the world has granted permission,
but because truth, justice, and culture do not require permission—they require action.

Institutional Call-to-Action Section
To UNESCO, World Bank, IDB, CARICOM, MacArthur Fellows, Ford Foundation, and philanthropic leaders:
The Cultural Preservation Engine™ invites partnership, support, and scale.
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This is a blueprint for sustainable cultural economies
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A replicable system for measurable impact and cultural sovereignty
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A bridge between heritage, economics, and global justice
The world will not remember who observed.
It will remember who acted.
The Engine is ready.
Will you act alongside it?
Closing Section — Statement of Purpose
Culture is inheritance.
Culture is currency.
Culture is power.
Culture is survival.
The Cultural Preservation Engine™ secures it.
FDLV amplifies it.
We do not ask the world for recognition.
We command it through impact.
Heritage is power.
Identity is wealth.
Ownership is survival.
The Caribbean is the first proof—but the world is next.
We do not preserve history merely to record it.
We preserve it to rewrite the future.









