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00:00Who would have believed it?
00:02After the zombies
00:04I ate human flesh
00:05and vampires
00:07If you forget
00:09You will be the last human on Earth
00:12Oh
00:16Praise be to God
00:18She is a human being other than me, living
00:20What is the separation?
00:20Who are you?
00:21I am Atef
00:22The last human on Earth
00:24I didn't give it, but sorry guys.
00:25You are facing the last human being on the face of the real Earth
00:28If we two exist, then none of us are the last human beings.
00:31But you've deprived me of the most important thing in my life.
00:34I've lived my whole life as a broken, neglected dog.
00:38I never had friends, I was always alone.
00:41Even in my final days, I was alone.
00:44He remained alone and isolated.
00:47I am the last human being on Earth
00:52In Emtri?
00:52That's it, my friend.
00:54What is my religion, Tunisia, your unity?
00:56We don't need to be standing in your stomach
00:58Shoulder to shoulder
00:59My back is your back
01:01I'll carry you and you'll carry me
01:02And we ease the pain of the end of the world together
01:05Ha
01:06What did you say, my friend?
01:08Fax
01:11Who would have believed it?
01:16After the zombie invasion
01:19And hacked human flesh
01:20and vampires
01:21If you are forgotten
01:24You will be the last human on Earth
01:34Dear ones, month of prayer and blessings
01:35Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program
01:37My dear viewers, allow me to begin with a bold question.
01:40I thought that one day the planet Earth might continue without humans
01:43We all love him, fortunately for us
01:45We are going extinct from planet Earth
01:47It also tracks the
01:47Except for the question of the line
01:48I've told you a hundred times, don't end the world before you get married.
01:51My dear, I'm telling you this so you can save yourself from extinction.
01:53The idea of extinction, my dear, is out of the question in our minds.
01:56Because we've lived a long time and seen tons of disasters
01:58Thank God, science is progressing gradually.
02:01We didn't get anything
02:01He was the first to be isolated in much more difficult circumstances.
02:04But let me tell you a very uncomfortable truth
02:06I want to take you off and tell you that we've been on planet Earth for a long time
02:09It doesn't mean at all that we'll be around forever, my dear.
02:12Unfortunately, no matter how long life continues, extinction is inevitable.
02:15It means it will happen, it will happen
02:16Dreamers believe that planet Earth has existed for about 4.5 billion years.
02:21And for about a billion years the planet remained almost completely devoid of life
02:25The first microscopic life we know of
02:28It appeared about 3.5 billion years ago
02:30And during this period, my dear, life began to remain a trend on the planet.
02:33Some simple lives tell you what we experience
02:35DNA, RNA, viruses, bacteria, insects
02:40Little by little, we'll see animals on the planet.
02:42But what united all of them was that no matter how many years they lived
02:47The common belief is that extinction is their ultimate fate.
02:49My dear, approximately 99.99% of the creatures that have lived on planet Earth
02:54It disappeared completely and became extinct forever.
02:57For example, you have one of the creatures that has lived for the longest periods on Earth.
03:00There was something called a trilobite
03:01These are arthropod-like creatures that look like crabs.
03:03Creatures that have lived on the planet for 270 million years
03:07Before they face the largest mass extinction in Earth's history
03:09This is a diamond extension
03:12This, my dear, is extinction the day my love is carried away with the planet.
03:14It carries 95% of marine life, except on this land.
03:18Asi and Khasaya divisions
03:21Naft Afal Shakayya
03:24Extinction, my dear, is almost a blessing from the sea.
03:26Dinosaurs, my dear, these giant creatures
03:29She lived on Earth for tens of millions of years
03:32Approximately 150 million years
03:34And after all that brilliance and stardom, they disappeared and became completely extinct.
03:39Paleontologist David Robb at the University of Chicago
03:41He says in his book
03:42Logical thinking ultimately leads humans to the realization that extinction is inevitable.
03:48Because simply put, if all types of grass were on this earth, they wouldn't have gone extinct.
03:51You will find between five and fifty billion creatures living among us.
03:55Rumor has it that a bride from the central region is crammed with furniture
03:57The simplicity of extinction means that it is the norm, not the exception.
04:00The origin of life on Earth is the disappearance of life, not immortality and eternal existence.
04:04Is it possible for a person to explain this rule to us?
04:07This, my dear, is an important question
04:08I'll go out and come back, and I'll give you what you need.
04:09And I didn't get lost on the way
04:11But I'm talking to you now, my dear.
04:12Hundreds of scientists are working in research centers and scientific institutes on just one thing.
04:17Their children will see and know how humans will become monkeys?
04:20For example
04:20At Oxford University
04:23or
04:24The one who has an entire department dedicated to studying catastrophic existential risks
04:29Scientists specializing in this study are looking for the Delete key to help us.
04:32Even the United Nations itself has an office for disaster studies.
04:36UNDRR
04:37Hajj Office from Disaster Risks
04:39This office, my dear, specializes in studying global existential risk scenarios.
04:44All countries, my dear, are at peace. A simple question.
04:45The question here
04:46Is this a human being we'll revile or not?
04:47Question
04:48How is it that the human ape and the neighboring country are now writing in their book?
04:51Our final hour
04:52British astronomer Martin Rees says
04:54The chance of humanity surviving until the end of the 21st century
04:57Akshli Akshli Baqa
04:58Less than 50%
04:59But let me surprise you and tell you that humanity is currently living through the most dangerous period in its history.
05:03And most likely, all of its existence will disappear in the next few years.
05:07And this, my dear, is a failure in the world of living beings.
05:10When you were like a dinosaur
05:11I've been sitting here for 165 million years
05:13You're in the hall, you prophet, come and sit with me for hundreds of thousands of years, and thank you.
05:17You are a failure
05:17Oh, how I rejoice in your brain!
05:18Oh, how happy I am with your intelligence!
05:19Oh, how I delight in your philosophy!
05:21I am so happy about your programming ability.
05:23That's me, a question that didn't have a caper.
05:24He didn't have a pinky and ring finger, he used them.
05:26He lived for what is 65 million years, a failure
05:28In Kinata, billions of years have passed.
05:30Not fertilized by yourself?
05:31His last move was like that, he won you over
05:32Hamad, excuse me, I have a question.
05:34Don't you want to be with me yourself?
05:35You are checking the programming
05:36Are you backward with us?
05:37What is this?
05:37Where is your accent, my dear?
05:38We're all alone now, Mohamed.
05:40Not the time for Baheeb from his phone
05:41He listens to these two words so we can see them.
05:42What are we going to do about this disaster?
05:43Hey, my dear, I'm telling you that there
05:45It means a lot of scientific glasses
05:46Which explains how humans could end
05:48I'm not going to bother you by focusing on all these scenarios.
05:51This episode will focus on five scenarios, but
05:53Now you need to focus on the call to Islam.
05:54She claims that none of them will happen
05:55Scenario 1
05:56The epidemic
06:00541 AD
06:02A grain ship is arriving from Alexandria
06:04Where are you going?
06:05Heading towards the capital of the Byzantine Empire
06:08Constantinople
06:08On the deck of this ship
06:09Passengers of a very special kind
06:11From a group of bakers
06:12any?
06:13Honestly, the baker isn't alone, my dear.
06:14The oven was loaded with some fleas
06:16To be honest, these mice
06:18She was carrying fleas
06:19The fleas were carrying something called
06:22Yersinia pestis bacteria
06:24My dear, this bacterium is not innocent.
06:25Because it is the bacteria that causes plague
06:28Very simply
06:28The bakery is the least of your worries on the ship
06:31At the moment the ship arrives
06:32The plague of Justin began to spread.
06:34Which is named after the Byzantine Empress Justine
06:36A plague spread throughout the world
06:38To become one of the biggest epidemics
06:39Which struck humanity in their modern history
06:42This, my dear, was not the first epidemic humanity has seen.
06:44But it was the first epidemic to be accurately described.
06:47A plague, my dear Rustin
06:48Between 30 and 50 million people were killed
06:51any?
06:51That's a terrifying number, my friend.
06:53bacteria that much?
06:5420% Airplane
06:55One-fifth of the world's population
06:5720% of every five
06:59One is dying
06:59out of every five companions
07:00In one with the plague
07:01After the villages, my dear
07:0280% of them were Bepad
07:05The plague of Beiji is over
07:06For many years
07:06Humans have seen dozens of global pandemics
07:09Epidemics wiped out significant proportions of the population
07:11Black Death plague
07:13For example, in the fourteenth century
07:14My dear, he spent a percentage estimated
07:1525% to 40% of humans
07:18Almost half of humanity is on Kokm
07:20We care about the disease
07:21French, Spanish for example
07:22It killed approximately 5% of the world's population
07:24Approximately 100 million people
07:26What's strange about it
07:27It's like dealing with a hetman, my dear.
07:28They kill young men
07:29Those who are in good health are more numerous than the elderly.
07:31Ahmed, why is my stomach so upset?
07:33It reminded me of those awful Corona days
07:34That's right, Abu Ahmed.
07:35I am a male Corona
07:36What is it, a wild thing and everything?
07:38But in Tikri, life went on.
07:39Thank God we have minimal losses
07:41Medicine is advancing and providing us with solutions.
07:42And in the year of the thief, we received five vaccines
07:44Like someone who knows the difference between them
07:45And nobody knows what their purpose is in the first place.
07:47And in the end, Yasmin, patience proved to be the right thing to do.
07:48When she said her immortal sentence
07:50Whoever takes it, takes it, and whoever wants to finish it, finishes it.
07:51Survival of the fittest
07:54Let me finish what you were saying, my dear, by saying that I agree with you and tell you
07:56Those who agree, agree; those who disagree, disagree.
07:58And the ring remains
07:59Let's get back to our topic.
08:00Actually, my dear
08:01COVID-19 is a series of epidemics, and it's a poor thing.
08:02The fifth of them, by accepting it
08:03tired
08:04I agree with you, my dear, and with Yasmine Sabr.
08:05But allow me to disagree at the same time
08:07Despite the fact that COVID was a major event, my dear
08:09However, it was a plague of its own making.
08:10This happened in the history of devastating epidemics
08:12COVID-19 is a series of epidemics, and it's a poor thing.
08:14The three of them were influenza
08:15You, my dear, have never seen epidemics
08:16You don't know anything
08:17The turban's estimates say
08:18The death rate from injuries
08:20My dear, it wasn't even 1% complete.
08:22Sars, for example, my dear
08:23It exists in the universe around us
08:25It is a very contagious virus
08:27The death rate remained at a level similar to SARS.
08:29From 9% to 11%
08:30March, its mortality rate reaches 34%
08:32Ebola has a mortality rate of up to 90%, my dear.
08:35Hassan Hazi Azizi
08:36These viruses are slower to spread between humans
08:38So I want you, my dear, to feel reassured temporarily.
08:40Because the next question
08:41They still
08:42They still
08:43These viruses evolved themselves one day
08:45And it continued to spread faster
08:47Imagine if Ebola had the same spread as COVID
08:49or influenza
08:50Do you know, my dear Zuhalia?
08:51We won't be able to get it installed.
08:52Or don't throw it away
08:53What if a completely different virus, stronger than them, were to appear?
08:56A virus we don't know
08:57We don't know anything about him at all.
08:58And you know that these are just probabilities.
09:00Scientists estimate that we have about 1.7 out of 10 million viruses.
09:04These aren't the ones we discovered, my dear.
09:06no
09:06Countries that are not yet known
09:08We will discover them, God willing.
09:09Found in wild animals
09:1125% to 50% of these viruses
09:14They may be transmitted to humans
09:15Viruses that exist at the moment
09:16SARS, MERS and COVID
09:18This, my dear, is basically the basics.
09:20New strains
09:21We knew nothing about it for a very strange time.
09:23That's not how it is, my dear.
09:23Our current human activity
09:24This creates a scenario for the transmission of viruses unknown to us.
09:27animals
09:28It is very possible
09:29And let me tell you, I don't want to talk about our current human activity.
09:31Humans in the last 100 years only
09:32They succeeded in removing 30% of the world's forest area.
09:36The forests became devoid of rainflies.
09:37Throughout the forests that existed in Kokum
09:39They want to work in the light
09:41He takes it, transforms it, divides it into needs
09:43He finds things there
09:44Cooler is going back and forth and the world is working
09:46Now we come to the last 100 years
09:47Qat Yab from 30%
09:48What I'm trying to say here, my dear
09:50If you're removing forests
09:51animals
09:52You start to find you can't find a wall to lean on.
09:54You start to see
09:54What are these people doing?
09:55Why don't we count with them?
09:56What's wrong with them?
09:58Why don't we infect them with our viruses?
10:00This leads to the existence of creatures
10:02Our relationship with her is ongoing.
10:03She's checking on her homes
10:04And you still want to live among us
10:05Some of them, for example, are like the handsome Mr. Bat.
10:07It became a mobile virus reservoir
10:095000 types of species
10:11Bats almost outpaced the forests
10:12And she lived, by the Lord of mankind
10:13Every tree is a lion in the forest
10:15It means there is an animal
10:24I ordered protein on a plate of noodles
10:25We slept for a year and a half
10:26What else, my dear?
10:27Life and climate change
10:28climate change
10:28What we are working on, God willing
10:30It's like Qatar isn't behind us.
10:32Ice scars means ice scars
10:34What are ice-drenched creatures, my dear?
10:35I'm surprised
10:36Types of bacteria that brought me back to life
10:37Types of bacteria in Rizer and Vicks
10:39It was frozen for approximately 50,000 years
10:41The worst
10:42The scientific and technological stage
10:43He didn't stop there.
10:44That's true, and it developed medicine and made emergency care easier.
10:46But at the same time
10:47Leave room for the transmission of a deadly virus
10:49It remains much faster than before.
10:50The ship that transported the stun guns was Justin.
10:52It took weeks to get here
10:54I want a single ship in a vast sea
10:56Today he talked to me about transportation.
10:59Talk to me about the squash
11:00Tell me about your colleague who's just sitting there babbling.
11:03Call me on the flight
11:04We, my dear, every day
11:06All of this
11:07How many flights do we have?
11:09How many hundreds of thousands of flights a day?
11:12There are approximately one hundred thousand planes above you.
11:14It flies daily
11:15His prayer is 365 days a year
11:18For all types of infections
11:19The infection that started today in China
11:22She travels to New Zealand, then goes to America
11:24You come to the Middle East, you go to Europe
11:25We're done
11:26The moment you think we're done, you start working and spreading infections and all that.
11:28She finds herself in the act of starting on your nose
11:30This has become a movement of bacteria
11:37It took a week for the first case to appear in America.
11:39This, my dear, requires the largest ocean in the world.
11:42Pacific Ocean
11:43The world, my dear, is not a small village.
11:45The world has become like a bathroom with a pigeon.
11:47Also, we are more numerous
11:48And living in more remote cities
11:49The distance between the houses and the ruler of the streets
11:51It has a very small version from a long time ago.
11:52All of these things will make it easier for the infection to spread.
11:55Constantinople in the time of Justin's stabbings
11:57Constantinople, my dear, was the largest city on Earth at that time.
12:00How many are in it?
12:00Half a million people, first from last
12:02This is with slippers
12:02Today, the city has half a million inhabitants.
12:04This is a small city
12:05This is the building of the mother
12:05How many people, my dear, live in the city of Cairo?
12:07From ten to twenty-three million human beings
12:10The half million that crowded Constantinople
12:12I looked at them in the morning
12:13They were present in the Manoub area, and they were behind it.
12:14Which million-person city in a pandemic scenario?
12:17This equates to tens of millions of sources of infection.
12:19By God, let's keep your mind focused on something
12:21You told me in more than one place that the medical process has developed
12:23What we saw was that in approximately 12 months
12:25The factory, by God's will, what God wills
12:27We got a vaccine
12:28I took the first dose and then hit the second dose.
12:30But thank God that I didn't get hurt, I mean
12:31Yes, my dear, which laboratories?
12:32The truth, my dear, is that this is what scares some scientists the most.
12:35The first experiment was conducted in 2011
12:37Why is it called the "Dear Generation of Function"?
12:40Acquiring jobs
12:41Di Azizi's experiment was, quite simply, for the benefit of humanity.
12:44Through this experiment, a group of scientists tried to answer a legitimate question.
12:48A question related to bird flu
12:50Fares, my dear, was a true or real killer.
12:52How come we don't want to talk about COVID?
12:5350% of those who contracted bird flu died.
12:56But fortunately, its ability to spread
12:59It may be weak if it spreads among humans
13:00Thank God, it's over for the best.
13:02And nobody got hurt, meaning chickens.
13:03But we always had the question ready
13:05If this virus evolves and acquires the ability to spread rapidly between humans
13:08So how are we going to deal with this mess?
13:10From her, dear, began the experiments of acquiring jobs.
13:13Or, let's see the logic behind it.
13:14What are we going to do?
13:15We will count the virus and give it a new function.
13:17Let's see what it will look like in front of us.
13:19From 2011 to 2014
13:21American scientists conducted experiments on different viruses.
13:23And our goal is to
13:24Let's see the dangerous version
13:26So, what are we going to do about it?
13:27Develop and study your enemy before he becomes your enemy.
13:30So that you can defeat him
13:31What happened, my dear, was a big problem.
13:32To follow the knowledge
13:33Unfortunately, this happened to the Democrats.
13:35In 2014, Obama estimated
13:37These experiments were completely halted
13:39And she halted more than 20 projects along with it.
13:41These projects were very important in producing dangerous viruses.
13:44The strange and bizarre things that make you not understand how America works
13:47And who is holding her armband?
13:48In 2018, the Trump administration was the one that partially revived these experiments.
13:53With strict standards being imposed forward
13:55Honestly, my dear, no one has ever been proven wrong by their ideology.
13:57Honestly, these opening and closing procedures
13:59The responses were manipulative, reflecting a terrifying fear that existed.
14:02You're probably watching it every week on MBC2
14:05Is it? Is it? Is it?
14:06Is it possible this vicious virus was released accidentally?
14:08Does he leave the lab?
14:09So what happened, my dear, simply put?
14:10Yes
14:11And I got
14:12Unfortunately, my dear, we have dozens of accidents.
14:14To dispose of deadly viruses from testing laboratories
14:17That means in 1977 there was a mini-pandemic like that
14:19A virus has spread to a thousand people worldwide.
14:21He was very strong, strangely so.
14:23Her time
14:23The genomes when they examined this virus
14:25They discovered it was an exact replica
14:27From the virus that spread in another pandemic in 1950
14:30This is something that cannot happen naturally.
14:32Because the thousand-influenza virus is evolving very rapidly.
14:35It's impossible for him to come to me after 27 full years.
14:37I receive the same version
14:38There are new downloads every now and then.
14:39Scientists realized that the mini-pandemic
14:41The reason is a more likely presentation
14:42He goes back to the old notebooks
14:44Also, my dear, the year 1979
14:45The biological weapons laboratory of the Soviet Union
14:48The anthrax virus was accidentally released
14:50It spread through the middle of a Russian village
14:52Dozens of villagers died
14:54And as usual, the Soviet thing
14:55Anker and the Zacostoplez
14:57But what happens after years
14:59Boris Yeltsin admits
15:00And was it a mistake?
15:02I already got it
15:03The virus leaked from a laboratory.
15:05And the Soviet Union, I always say
15:06Someone should remove all the old authorities
15:08It has the shift, the Litov
15:09Even if we look at a democratic state, my dear
15:11Let's see, for example, the year 2007
15:12Foolishness is a disease in England.
15:14The one that leaks from the laboratory
15:15Due to a broken pipe
15:16It is caused by the outbreak of the disease
15:18The lab, my dear, admits
15:19He says that we did maintenance work
15:21We fixed the problem
15:22Thank God we welded the pipe
15:23And my dear friend surprised me two weeks later.
15:25There was another leak
15:25We also have a tragic incident
15:27The last person in the world to die of smallpox
15:29Smallpox is not contagious
15:30no
15:30This came from a leak
15:31It is clear that the laboratories
15:32I need a good leak detector.
15:33Finch grass is doing well, everyone.
15:35on the pipes
15:35And that's why it didn't spread virally
15:36It grows
15:37One of the uncomplicated looks
15:38She considers that COVID-19
15:40It is the result of research experiments
15:41I got it in a lab
15:42In the Chinese city of Wuhan
15:44It was accidentally leaked from the laboratory.
15:45And we all wore
15:46Even if these safety standards are very high
15:48And very strong
15:48So you can guarantee
15:50There's no one who's doing
15:52These experiments are somewhere
15:53For extremely evil purposes, only God knows.
15:55And there's one in it, I hear
15:56We live in the Fifth Settlement
15:57Biological studies, class
15:59Is that reasonable, Abu Ahmad?
16:00In a despicable manner, yes, I am so happy
16:01Yes, dear, one ID
16:02He experienced hair loss
16:03Increase in nose length
16:05He suffered a severe crisis
16:06I made him try to whiten humans
16:07He tells them
16:08Misinformation about the world
16:09It ends with their annihilation
16:10Love, my dear, I know you are my paradise
16:12What I didn't succeed with, I found
16:13Let me tell you, my dear
16:13The world already
16:14Full of real famous people
16:16Humans, my dear, use viruses.
16:18The length of time spent in their conflicts
16:19I'm not going to tell you, of course
16:20In the days of the Middle Ages
16:21The place, my dear, brings the catapult
16:22And they put in the body
16:23People who are covered in stab wounds
16:2436 acres of infection
16:27Love of the catapult
16:28Beware, enemy
16:29Smell, enemy
16:30Give my regards to the martyrs who are with you
16:31A science advises WhatsApp to inject it into poison.
16:33And we have the hadith in Arslin
16:35difficult webs
16:35For the use of viruses in government
16:37Unit 731 of the Japanese Army
16:39They deliberately moved
16:40deliberate
16:41cholera and plague
16:43Among the Chinese, to kill thousands
16:44And thousands of them
16:45Listen to the page, O Arab door
16:47us
16:47I still remember, I remember
16:48If you've forgotten
16:49In the Al-Dahhih team, we didn't forget him.
16:50Even if you have poison, I know teriyaki.
16:53Wangiri
16:53You see, I'm still doing well.
16:55That's it, my dear, let me now wrap you in all the nonsense.
16:57And he made four fries for you
16:57Arn
17:01I'm sorry, everyone, please.
17:03By the way, Shaqash is caught.
17:03I'm still here, I'll play and come live
17:05I didn't betray you with FIFA
17:06Let me tell you another example, my dear
17:07apartheid government in South Africa
17:09They had a secret program
17:10Its name is the Coastal Project
17:11And the exact opposite of his name
17:12The one who falls in Marasi and Gassienda
17:14And the offspring and the ambition of its harvest
17:15This was a project consisting of experiments aimed at designing biological weapons that target sound only.
17:21It's not just wars or dictatorial regimes.
17:23There are deviant, abnormal humans who have used viruses to achieve their goals.
17:27One of the religious groups in the state of Oregon, USA
17:30It is an extremist group called Rajnesh
17:32Countries to win their candidate in the mayoral elections
17:35They found the city's restaurants and preferred and distributed salmonella there.
17:39And spread the salmonella bacteria so that people who eat at restaurants get sick.
17:42So, my dear, the people who voted in hospitals shouldn't vote in the elections.
17:45Therefore, only our members go and vote.
17:47Yebwa Clean, homemade food means nobody's watching, guys.
17:49And now we'll go down and sweep the ballot box and the candidate will win.
17:52Instead, my dear, we bring in a reputable brand company and work on an election program.
17:55No, we caused 750 people to be poisoned.
17:59We will lose the elections
18:00So, my dear, are you sure there isn't anyone with that mentality?
18:03He works in these laboratories and infects us with one of these viruses.
18:06And this time it's not a mistake, so it's a blessing.
18:07Toby Goole, a researcher at the Future of Humanity Institute in Oxford
18:11He tells us that the chance of human extinction due to viruses transmitted to us from animals
18:15It is one in ten thousand
18:16But there remains the possibility of our death due to a virus leak from a laboratory.
18:23It reaches one to thirty
18:24O God, protect us, protect you, and protect the laboratories.
18:27All of these things, my dear, lead us to the second scenario.
18:31nuclear winter
18:35If you bought the episode "The Last Day on Earth", my dear
18:37You surely know about the Soviet submarine incident.
18:39If you haven't seen it, please see it.
18:41It is one of our best episodes in terms of narrative.
18:43Soviet submarine B-59
18:45Which was located near America during the Cuban Missile Crisis
18:48960
18:49At a certain moment, the submarine's connection to the base was severed.
18:52And, my dear, the people who came to the submarine were convinced
18:54World War III is underway.
18:56One here with a bus in the submarine
18:57At that time, my dear, if you recall, the captain was thinking of taking action.
19:00He took orders to launch a nuclear torpedo towards America.
19:04Torpedo and equal in power
19:05Hiroshima bomb
19:07So that this decision can be implemented according to protocol.
19:08I need unanimous approval from the three officers.
19:11The three assistant officers who are with the captain
19:13What happened, my dear, is that two people stopped
19:14But one named Vasily Arkhopov refused
19:18The surprise, my dear, is that in Action there was no World War III.
19:21But if this torpedo had been hit, there would have been
19:24We owe it to this man that there was no World War III.
19:28Because it would have been a nuclear war that would have destroyed the planet four times over.
19:32When the United States of America entered into a Soviet alliance
19:35At that time, with its nuclear arsenal, the planet would have been a brisk trade.
19:38We'll remove the bone meat like this, and if we add something like this, it will cause the first wave of it.
19:42Between 200 and 325 million people were killed.
19:46Countries that would have died in the Eastern Bloc
19:48Why? Because America wasn't going to stay silent.
19:49This wasn't the only time we came close to nuclear war.
19:52For example, we learned in the confidential reports of 2013
19:55It was 1883, at the height of the Cold War.
19:58The Soviet early warning system was detected by radar.
20:00Five nuclear missiles were launched from America and landed on Moscow within five minutes, guards
20:06What you feel will become a rotisserie chicken
20:08The officer in charge, Sanslav Petrov, is the one who put that head on the radar.
20:12This man should have informed the leadership immediately.
20:14We are currently under attack.
20:16And the response will most likely be, "You hit them too."
20:19But what happened, my dear, was good luck. Thanks for the hesitation.
20:22The man hesitated, doubted the matter, and decided not to inform the leadership.
20:26He decided to wait and find out later if there was a system malfunction.
20:30He's the one who made this false choice.
20:32If it was locked and unlocked and then reopened, it would be normal.
20:34Nothing will come of it.
20:35In a press interview, Petrovin said, "I am not interested in being honored as a hero."
20:38I'm more interested in the question of what we would do if this happened again.
20:40The shooter is dear to the nuclear weapons ban agreements.
20:43Or at least reduce her habit
20:44Except that God's name is what God wills.
20:46We have in this world today
20:47The world is in front of the United Nations and the Red Cross
20:50International institutions, international law, and international humanitarian law
20:53And all these things
20:55In 12,000 nuclear warheads
20:56Americans, Russians, Indians, Pakistanis, Israelis
21:01English French
21:03And each one of them has a shaved head.
21:04India and Pakistan, those two countries are going crazy over each other, my dear, there are tens of millions of people involved.
21:09If everyone were to act with a nuclear mindset towards each other
21:11It's not like we can get into the math in tens.
21:12The question now is, what will happen to the oasis of madness in his mind, and how will he use this weapon?
21:16Dr. Robeck told me he is a professor of climate science at Tatgers University
21:19The work is a research team with a scenario.
21:21If India and Pakistan were to exchange places, this would be one of their frequent battles and wars.
21:25A masterful delivery in the Nubian language, like a thorn
21:27The esteemed study reached a terrifying conclusion.
21:29First of all, in the name of God, what God wills, opening the conversation
21:31From fifty to one hundred and twenty-five million direct deaths
21:35The real problem is that this will generate around
21:37Five million tons of smoke and steam
21:40It will rise, my love, to the upper atmosphere.
21:42This causes the sun to be blocked in a large part of the world.
21:46Temperatures will drop globally by one to two degrees.
21:49The heat-control device we're trying to adjust will be destroyed.
21:52Don't talk about the harvest anymore, don't talk about the cows anymore.
21:55My dear, if the sun were to perform the Hajj ritual, the water wouldn't evaporate from the earth.
21:58Therefore, the rainfall will decrease.
22:00According to research, the percentage could reach thirty percent.
22:02Therefore, all the world's staple crops will be affected.
22:05For example, wheat production will decrease globally from fifteen to thirty percent.
22:09See how much the local one will cost, you'll get it from the Qiti M after that.
22:12For example, corn will decrease by twenty to forty percent, there won't be any popcorn.
22:15Between you and me, my dear, the problem isn't the popcorn.
22:17We'll go to the cinema, you know, sir, we'll eat avocados.
22:20The problem, my dear, is that corn isn't just for human consumption.
22:23This is also animal food.
22:25"Bab, what's wrong with you, Abu Ahmad, my dear? You're not eating the animal."
22:27What will happen in Al-Durra will lead to severe famine and a shortage of meat.
22:33In short, in short, an incident like this could cause the death of two billion people.
22:38With all due respect, these two countries possess the largest number of nuclear arsenals.
22:42Ha
22:43The question remains, my friend, what if this nuclear war is between the US and Russia, or the US and China?
22:48Which triangle contains Trump, Putin, and Xi Jinping?
22:51With all due respect, those who give Pakistan another state could actually result in a nuclear war, I'm not kidding
22:56But in the end, it's like a solution with tea and cashmere. Scientists at a major university in Radu worked on a scenario. Imagine what they said: America and Russia used half their nuclear arsenal against each other.
23:03So, what could possibly happen?
23:05Yes, my dear, this will be the end, but it's the end in slow motion.
23:08Okay, my dear, forget about that bomb and Rosima, because that's a weak bomb, a pathetic bomb compared to all the bombs out there today.
23:13Today, my friend, we have much more powerful bombs, bombs many times more powerful. With the first bomb in this war, millions of people will die in a single moment.
23:20And whoever survives won't be a prodigy, they'll die a slow death; they're unlucky.
23:23This fire will produce 150 million tons of smoke. This smoke will come out from behind the walls and block the sun by 70 percent.
23:30Humans, my dear, will live in darkness for one to three years. You'll go to sleep, then after a while, I'll walk around the planet with flashlights.
23:37And this, my friend, will cause the Earth's temperature to drop. Do you know by how much? Multiply that number by 8 to 13 degrees.
23:45This is ridiculous, especially considering the scale of the temperature drop during the last ice age. It's a crisis, a crisis that's driving the United Nations crazy, my dear, just so you can imagine the extent of the planet's temperature decrease.
23:57We will somehow see many seas and oceans completely frozen; half of the planet will not see a single day a year with a temperature of zero.
24:05You, the bollfish in that water, are gone now. There's no more fish to be found, not just any fish, my dear.
24:09If you don't come down with a ball, you'll come down with a ball, and we'll need to put you outside so you can play in Russia.
24:13Agriculture in Northern Europe will completely cease, and in Russia, China, and Japan, the world will lose 80% of its existing food production.
24:20By the end of the second year of nuclear winter, 5 billion people will die of starvation.
24:2599% of the population of China will die, my dear.
24:27Professor Extinction, I'm still here. 75% of the population in America and Russia will also die.
24:33Ninety-nine percent of the population of England and Northern Europe will also suffer the same fate.
24:37But let's assume that the remaining humans appreciated the group's ability to find solutions.
24:40They estimated they would adapt to the new climate, but that wouldn't protect them from other disasters.
24:44This is because the smoke will damage 75% of the ozone layer.
24:47And after three years, they won't finish, the smoke will clear, and the sun will return.
24:50Humans will be exposed to general amounts of ultraviolet radiation.
24:55So you're removing 3-4 layers of the ozone layer.
24:57Who will protect you from the sun? El Shenawy?
24:58Many people, my dear, will immediately develop skin cancer.
25:01The plant will perish and the seaweed will die.
25:04And life will also end in the sea
25:06And this, my dear, will be the terrifying end.
25:07Bitter cold, global famine
25:09Pitch black darkness, and one day the sun will shine, cancer will appear instantly.
25:12The sun burns and kills everything.
25:14And it draws the line at the end of human civilization and its extinction forever.
25:17That's why, my dear, in August of the year 22
25:19The Secretary-General of the United Nations delivered a speech
25:21I am Zach Antonio Gotelech
25:22He told world leaders that humanity is one market away from understanding each other.
25:26One human error
25:28And we will reach nuclear annihilation
25:29May God bring it back to us and to you with peace and blessings
25:32The Arabic group wishes you a blessed breakfast.
25:34My dear nuclear friend
25:36It will leave no trace of life on planet Earth in general
25:39There were those we didn't know who might survive, but we wouldn't.
25:42And this, my dear, leads us to the third scenario.
25:44The third scenario is climate collapse.
25:50My dear, the Earth has experienced five major extinctions throughout its history.
25:54Each extinction event resulted in the death of 75% to 95% of the living beings on this planet.
26:00All these extinctions share one common factor
26:02It is a very large event that has led to a very significant climate change.
26:06A deadly change in the planet's living conditions led to extinction.
26:10Today, many scientists believe that we are living through the beginning of the sixth great extinction.
26:15Premonitions like that, my dear
26:16And you know very well, my dear, the activity of man and what he did to the climate
26:18Scientists from Stanford University confirmed in a paper with sensory evidence
26:21We are witnessing the extinction of animals around us at very rapid rates.
26:25Cam 114 times the normal rate
26:28114 times as much, Abu Ahmad
26:29114 times as much, my dear Abu Ahmed
26:31D and 14 times
26:32And there are still animals around us
26:33Inshallah, Abu 115 Rayeb
26:34In the type of heats
26:35We were telling you that some vertebrate animals have disappeared
26:37She could have lived for up to ten thousand years
26:39If not what?
26:40Human activity intervenes
26:41The most important reasons for this extinction and the factor that makes it faster
26:43It is climate change
26:44In the year 1888
26:46World leaders launched the Toronto Declaration
26:48The announcement that climate change has now reached a catastrophic stage
26:52A stage that is unparalleled in the world
26:54Except for a nuclear world war
26:56Over the years, countries around the world have agreed at climate conferences
26:59We, with the help of the Prophet, want to reach our beautiful planet Earth.
27:02It's very strong, its temperature increases by one and a half degrees.
27:04At most, otherwise we will face serious consequences.
27:08But today, 38 years after the Toronto Declaration
27:10Let's see what the temperature will be like in 2024. Will it reach that number?
27:14This, my dear, is the highest temperature ever recorded.
27:17Ask Dr. Hisham Al-Askari
27:19The man who keeps going around the planet and barking at the top of his lungs, folks
27:22Guess the climate change! Guess the climate change!
27:24One degree is a big deal in accounting, you don't know that.
27:27The weather gets hot, so we turn on the air conditioner, and that burns through the ray.
27:29The air gets hot, so we turn on the air conditioner, which burns the ray.
27:32In the rayon, the air gets hot, so we turn on the air conditioner, so we burn in the rayon, so the air gets hot, so we burn what?
27:36We will die wearing robots
27:38My dear Lord, He created this planet in balance
27:40The smallest change in its temperature
27:42How did this lead to disaster? May God protect us.
27:44You poured it, my dear, on the human body
27:45Imagine when his temperature rises two or three degrees, reaching forty
27:49We're not going to promise, guys, that it's just two or three points.
27:52No, I'm not going to spend the whole world on compresses.
28:02Collapse
28:03Ahmad, I have a sweet idea
28:04We, Abu Ahmed, prefer to utilize energy, utilize energy, utilize energy, utilize energy, because the planet is being used
28:08We fall into a nuclear war that threatens the country, so we descend, swallowing the tension, and we adjust it.
28:11We introduce ice into global warming, and the planet looks perfectly fine, like a showerhead.
28:15Oh
28:16Dear friend, honestly, I'm positive in defending myself, like someone who's been through hell.
28:18Why? Why are we doing this? Why don't we just stay home and play PlayStation?
28:22Why get involved in the sixth generation of Galidi sticks? When will I live in the Middle East?
28:25And when the answer is a little tight, you put on three layers of underwear on top of it.
28:28I'm so tired of hugging and sucking on the car because I can't find anything to pour into it.
28:31These three are out of the twenty, Muhammad.
28:33And next time, with some gentlemen
28:34According to a study conducted by scientists from Kentucky University
28:36The world is still talking about a very optimistic scenario for climate change.
28:41And God willing, all countries will come one day before the union.
28:44You gather the strands and their contents, and you gather all the temperatures.
28:47And the first thing that will happen is that the Democratic president will return and enter into agreements.
28:51Everything fell into place at the last minute, and John is beautiful, beautiful.
28:55But my dear, the truth is, I'm more worried than that.
28:58Countries are ignoring the truly alarming scenario.
29:01Which is within twenty in its current path
29:03What will happen is a rise in temperatures of approximately two to four degrees Celsius.
29:07What year is this, my dear?
29:09Two thousand hundred, which is it?
29:10Those born today are already
29:11He entered it while waiting too
29:12What will happen?
29:13At this moment, or before, possibly two billion people
29:15They will be living in places with average temperatures
29:17Whether in summer or winter, it's a big deal and a big deal together.
29:19Approximately twenty-nine degrees
29:21So that you, my dear, understand
29:23For example, the average temperature of the city of Riyadh
29:25Twenty-six and two tenths
29:27Now she is very free
29:29Imagine if we added three more points to Riyadh
29:31Hair dryer, now faster
29:33Cairo has an average temperature of 2.10 degrees
29:35Kuwait twenty-six and four out of ten
29:37The average we are talking about in the degree
29:39It's an average that only occurs deep within the desert.
29:41Uninhabited areas
29:43At this moment, my dear, a quarter of the Earth's population
29:45They will see a summer with temperatures reaching
29:47During the day, fifty
29:49fifty-five degrees
29:51In a state of extreme heat
29:53And sweating is a form of heat and perspiration.
29:55One day we'll love to breathe fresh air
29:57And we'll take a break and go into the oven.
29:59They'll all be crunchy, my dear.
30:01For example, you have the populations of North Africa and Bangladesh.
30:03Pakistan and southern China
30:05And the southern United States wish
30:07But unsuitable for human life
30:09From its foundation
30:11The human body is not designed to withstand this
30:13My dear, one of the biggest migrations is about to happen.
30:15In the world
30:17Two billion people will leave the place they live in.
30:19They will be forced to move.
30:21Entire countries will disappear from existence
30:23With unprecedented waves of legal and illegal immigration
30:25But all of this, my dear
30:27Let's surprise you and I'll tell you
30:29The problem only begins with the rise in temperatures.
30:31There are many things you won't know, Tam and Tani
30:33For example, we will reduce corn production by 86%
30:35You'd need to be a bank manager to get a helmet
30:37And this, as I told you, my dear, is a main concern.
30:39And a food source not just for humans
30:41The animal is flying with him
30:43That's their fava beans.
30:45They eat corn for breakfast and corn for dinner
30:47We are talking about the near-total destruction of the agricultural sector.
30:49Animal and human
30:51We're talking about about 75% of humanity.
30:53You will be exposed to a very large famine
30:55But with increasing temperatures
30:57We will have a huge amount of water evaporating.
30:59My dear planet, you will turn into blocks
31:01The vapor will rise to the upper layers of the atmosphere and become suffocated above
31:03One temperature increase
31:05You hear about a 7% increase
31:07In steam, the steam that comes out of the ground
31:09She is one of the companions of most
31:11My dear planet, it will be dusty.
31:13It will bring you a stormier
31:15Therefore, more rain and more flooding.
31:17My dear, he will experience a very strange paradox.
31:19Areas turning into deserts
31:21And areas are drowning in excess water.
31:23One of the terrifying consequences of high temperatures
31:25It will make the stick a carrier of diseases
31:27He goes to live in places he's never lived before.
31:29He takes two and takes two in his pocket
31:31Deadly viruses
31:33The scenario we saw at the beginning
31:35Malaria viruses and Hamad, all of this will spread
31:37New diseases will come to people
31:39Immunity to viruses and new diseases that come their way
31:41What is this, my dear?
31:43Europeans did it in the Americas
31:45One of the most important methods of extermination
31:47What happened to the Native Americans
31:49The Europeans were with them.
31:51Fanta, today when this happens to you
31:53From the coming migrations
31:55Because there are climate crises
31:57It's not just human movement, animals also move.
31:59I thought there were viruses and bacteria there.
32:01Humans move with nations
32:03They attack each other everywhere in the world
32:05My dear, when you come, you come like this.
32:07And the troubles keep piling up like that, like koshari.
32:09Everything comes down to everything else, everyone's telling you this
32:11My dear, the ice hasn't melted yet.
32:13The ice is still holding, my love.
32:15Now imagine, my dear, the most dangerous and the most dangerous
32:17When the ice decides that it can't do that anymore
32:19And New York will disappear
32:21And more important than both of them is your girlfriend.
32:23And my beloved and Fairouz's beloved
32:25Alexandria is not Alexandria anymore
32:27The average for inclusion in Kafr El Sheikh
32:29Kafr El Sheikh has become a coastal city
32:31Professor Mohamed Baqa and Professor Abkoub begin
32:33Their podcast is set up by the sea.
32:35And let me tell you, my dear, that at that time, gelato and liver will disappear.
32:37That will be the last thing we need to worry about.
32:39But the cities will be flooded
32:41My dear, when ice melts, it hides something underneath.
32:43A gas called methane
32:45The gas that has an effect 28 times greater
32:47The effect of carbon dioxide gas
32:49I had a mouse, I replaced it with a lion.
32:51This means greater global warming
32:53It means the ball is getting bigger and bigger
32:55It's simply like there's a gas leak.
32:57On the planet, it's not just that
32:59Ice plays an important role in preservation
33:01On the balance of the earth because it reflects
33:03Huge amounts of sunlight
33:05So when this ice melts
33:07The land beneath it will be dark, and therefore it will absorb
33:09More sun and the temperature gets higher and higher
33:11When we get from this point, my dear, it will be as if we
33:13We dropped a rock from the top of a mountain
33:15There is no way to stop it.
33:17The closer we get to the bottom, the more
33:19The rock is more dangerous and faster
33:21And approaching the Earth to the point of
33:23Eventually, you hit rock bottom and it's all over.
33:25That, my dear, was simply
33:27Scenario 3 is extremely severe. Come
33:29Now let's look at the fourth scenario.
33:31What if danger comes?
33:33From outer space
33:35Scenario 4: A disaster from space
33:37Viam
33:41February 15, 2013
33:43Chelyabinsk, Russia
33:45powerful explosion ring
33:47200,000 square meters of glass flew away
33:497300 buildings were destroyed
33:51In six different schools
33:53People looked up at the sky and saw a meteor shower.
33:5520 meters only
33:57My dear, this meteor exploded in the atmosphere from here.
33:59Thankfully nothing happened to the cover.
34:01But the impact on the ground was significant.
34:0320 meters in celestial body dimensions
34:05That's all nonsense.
34:07baby sizes
34:09But the explosion on the ground itself
34:11Its power was 30 times greater than the Hiroshima bomb.
34:13Those who are doing this, we've been using them as an example since morning.
34:15It wasn't just the power of those 30 drums that was terrifying.
34:17Terrifying, my dear, and frightening
34:19No one even noticed him.
34:21We just suddenly discovered it, just like that.
34:23There was a meteorite that was completely hidden from all observation points.
34:25No one knew about his existence
34:27Except when the explosion happened
34:29The limit of throwing something from above
34:31Wow, my dear, we have technologies
34:33Stop and launch ballistic missiles
34:35But they don't know how to stop the 20-meter-long jet.
34:37Now, my dear, let me tell you about the meteorites.
34:39Asteroids and celestial bodies
34:41Extremely important
34:43Our problems
34:45Saying it is from us, from us, she dreams from us.
34:47In short, these are the problems I told you about before.
34:49It is still in the form of vapor
34:51Or it's a little bit different, I mean
34:53He controlled it by saying
34:55God willing, the scientists will do a good job.
34:57They protect us from these viruses
34:59But what should we wear for that blow coming from outside?
35:01How do we prepare it?
35:03Let me tell you, my dear, about one of the biggest natural disasters.
35:05Which passed through the history of the earthly villages
35:07My dear, the asteroid is called Chicxloop.
35:09Hit the ground
35:11Specifically in the Yucatán Peninsula in Mexico
35:13What was the diameter of that, my dear?
35:15From 10 to 15 kilometers
35:17This incident, my dear, we know about it.
35:19Winover Afact, it caused
35:21In the biggest disaster in the history of the planet
35:2376% became extinct because of it
35:25Types of organisms
35:27Those on the surface of the earth
35:2999% of species have gone extinct
35:31That means we took 76% of the types of organisms
35:33We took approximately 99% of all organisms
35:35This, my dear, is the famous incident.
35:37The one that killed almost the largest creatures
35:39Amethyst on planet Earth, we find fossils
35:41Mega Star Extinct Creatures
35:43dinosaurs
35:45The land is in a state of constant heat.
35:47The sun disappeared for many years
35:49The plants died because there was no photosynthesis.
35:51The food chains, my dear, collapsed at that time.
35:53There were instances of darkening within the chains
35:55Those animals, my dear, it's as if they came out of
35:57Arabic exam, 2008
35:59Those who are saying that if this asteroid hadn't hit
36:01On the surface of the earth, the dinosaurs would have been there until this moment
36:03Life was like that of animals in the past.
36:05My dear friend, the question you are asking is, what is it?
36:07The possibility is that an asteroid will hit us again.
36:09Hamad, I don't ask about these things. You're a pessimist.
36:11Gloomy
36:13I'm a bit overwhelmed, and hopefully nothing will happen to me.
36:15Dear sir, please let's ask the question seriously.
36:17What if the Earth spoke of need?
36:19One year, Abu Hamad, you mean because the Earth is friendly?
36:21Kima Matarash Shopping
36:23The courtyard has arrived; the episode's ending was burned.
36:25Please, and don't put two [units of currency] in it, and let's see.
36:27What would happen if something hit the ring?
36:29On the planet
36:31A NASA Planetary Defense Lab report obtained
36:33The one that's released every year, so we're here until September.
36:352025 We discovered approximately
36:37Thirty-nine thousand dangerous objects
36:39Near the ground, there are 873 of them.
36:41Their mushroom planets are larger than one kilometer
36:43These, my dear, are their inventory.
36:45In space, they're close, that's not a problem.
36:47The problem is that countries aren't everything around us.
36:49NASA estimates that we have thousands of planets
36:51We know nothing about the Earth
36:53For example, fifty planets with a diameter of
36:55More than a kilometer, we haven't even discovered it yet.
36:57In about 14,000 planets
36:59Their diameter is greater than 140 meters
37:01And countries we haven't discovered yet.
37:03And that's a line, my dear, based on Hollywood movies.
37:05The next award will be given by a team of elite scientists.
37:07and the world's astronauts
37:09The US president is worried about the telephone
37:11We're working to create a relaxed, diverse team for you.
37:13So we can become addicted and win all the awards
37:15gay men and transgender people
37:17Six Men Children
37:19Armage Don Woody Impacto D After Tomorrow
37:23Let me tell you, my dear, that none of this will happen.
37:25What's really happening is don't you like it?
37:27The problem is as I told you, my dear.
37:29We don't even know he's coming.
37:31We have many planets that have come close to Earth.
37:33After I returned, peace be upon you
37:35For example, in the year 2020, planets will pass through
37:37His name is BT4 2020
37:39These planets, my dear, are at a distance
37:41Three hundred and seventy kilometers only on land
37:43It means a distance from Cairo, a message from the Sheikh
37:45The network found the idea, my dear, that we discovered it.
37:47After a blink of an hour from his passing
37:49Don't tell me about missiles or ballistic missiles anymore.
37:51This doesn't apply to agreements.
37:53He doesn't pronounce the British word that's said to him
37:55The length of time in an article published by Stephen Tenge
37:57Australian astronomy teacher says we did indeed discover
37:5995% of the large planets
38:01But that five percent figure is an unknown percentage.
38:03And the telescopes are watching
38:05But telescopes also have shortcomings.
38:07Blindspots and blind spots, so we see the planets
38:09And she is on her way to Earth
38:11The biggest problem is that all global efforts and funding
38:13What is available for this research
38:15It's never enough to be able to observe all the planets.
38:17The dangerous ones, especially those that get close to planet Earth, my dear.
38:19May God protect him, my love.
38:21Planet Earth, I don't know where it is from.
38:23Neither here nor there
38:25Neither here nor there
38:27And where from?
38:29And where from?
38:31If, my dear, after what I've told you, you still think that the planets
38:33It is the greatest danger in the sky
38:35So you're on the bait, which is more dangerous.
38:37radiation bursts
38:39Gamma
38:41And these, my dear, are rays produced by an explosion.
38:43We combine the meeting or collision of two stars into one another
38:45This is Mohamed Ramadan envying Amir Al-Qarara, this is what's happening
38:47This event releases energy in 10 seconds.
38:50More powerful than the energy the sun emits in 10 billion years
38:53If a similar explosion occurred 6000 light-years from Earth
38:56And the land, my dear, was exposed to it
38:58Do you know what will happen?
38:59First, the ozone layer dropped.
39:00Okay, goodbye, bank
39:01Everyone on Earth will be exposed to a tremendous amount of ultraviolet radiation.
39:05In marine algae, which are responsible for 50% of oxygen production on planet Earth
39:10You're going to die, my dear
39:10The food chain begins to break down and mass extinction occurs.
39:13If you think I'm something rare and has never happened before
39:16Scientists definitely choose this theory to scare us and get more money from us.
39:20say!
39:20Is that what you want to say?
39:22Honestly, they would do that.
39:23I'm bar with you, that means
39:24But, I mean, the scholars say, and the sources, when they're good, there's a kind of skepticism towards it, I mean
39:28She says this happened about 450 million years ago
39:31When this happened, it caused a pressure surge, which is the extinction of the Earth in Vichy.
39:35And extinction, my dear, wiped out 85% of life on Earth.
39:38Wow, my dear, all the extinctions are a hit in the annual cycle.
39:40No one gets less than 80%
39:42Why is extinction happening?
39:43It is true that the probability of this extinction recurring is very low, almost one in 15 million.
39:48But my dear, if it happened once, it can happen again and again.
39:52Also, my dear, one of the dangers we face from space is solar flares.
39:56Explosions that occur from inside the sun
39:58My dear Shams, you are like a nuclear reactor illuminating our world.
40:01Therefore, the explosions that occur inside it produce a huge cloud of plasma.
40:05CMA
40:06In 1859, the largest solar storm in recorded history occurred.
40:11Known as the Carrington Event
40:12A massive wave of plasma flew towards Earth.
40:14The power of the storm is the aurora borealis, which occurs as a result of the solar storm.
40:18It appeared near the equator
40:19How did he hear this on Earth?
40:20We see now, at the very moment, that telegraph stations are operating without electricity.
40:24Many telegraph wires were burned and melted completely.
40:27At this time
40:28Telegraphs were the only technology we knew of.
40:30This was WhatsApp, this storm
40:31But today the situation is completely different
40:33correct
40:33This storm won't be as destructive as Shay Gamma
40:35But, my dear, it might be enough.
40:37It will destroy all the technology we know.
40:39This happens, my dear, when a certain stock...
40:41Because of the magnetic waves he's talking about.
40:42Passing by or near us
40:44Then we will see a complete collapse of the electricity grid.
40:46A complete blackout around the world
40:48Some of our auditory heritage will be lost forever.
40:50Communication networks will be cut off
40:52I don't need to tell you that we will lose all navigation systems.
40:54The planes and ships are not working.
40:56Many computers and servers around the world
40:58Don't work again
40:59No, my dear, if something like that happens
41:00We will live for a long time
41:01Without electricity, internet, phone service, or a CV
41:05I'll say seven
41:05We will need, my dear
41:06Many trillions of dollars
41:07To bring back technology
41:08We're talking about something we've built over hundreds of years.
41:11After it is destroyed
41:12Naturally, it requires a huge amount of time and money.
41:14And that's what happened
41:15And these years will end
41:16Will the world remain the same then?
41:18If he comes back, he'll go back to how he was.
41:20The believer is more likely to believe that a solar storm
41:22Very strong, like this
41:23It happened once in July 2012
41:25And it passed through the orbit of the planet
41:26But what ruined our luck
41:27The planet was at a different point in its orbit at that time.
41:29And we didn't translate it
41:30Planet, my dear, danced the storm
41:31So, my dear, this event is described in scientific books as
41:34The event that almost struck the earth
41:36And this, my dear, takes us to the final scenario in this episode.
41:40Scenario 5
41:42artificial intelligence
41:47In March 2023, there was
41:4933,000 people
41:50At their head are huge leaders in the world of technology.
41:53He signs an open letter from the Future of Life Institute
41:56They are demanding an immediate halt to it.
41:58For six months, they worked on developing GPT chat.
42:01Until the world sits down, prepares, and understands
42:04Where are we going?
42:05At the top of the two signatories, my dear
42:07Elon Musk and Steve Wozniak
42:08Co-founder before
42:10She asks, "My dear?"
42:11Artificial intelligence
42:12This could cause deep problems for the community.
42:15This is because its systems have competitive capabilities with humans.
42:18This and that cause a lot of problems.
42:20Dear Life, OpenAI has not complied with this request.
42:23But on the other hand, after two months
42:24More than 350 EI executives and researchers
42:27Sam Altman is one of them
42:28One of the founders of OpenAI
42:30Demis Haspes
42:31Google founder DeepMine
42:32My dear, these countries signed a statement consisting of only one sentence.
42:35Statement published on the website
42:37Center of EI Safety
42:38Mitigating the risk of extinction from artificial reticulation
42:42It should be a global priority
42:44Along with other risks
42:46Such as pandemics and nuclear wars
42:48This, my dear, was a very strange thing.
42:49When the people who develop this technology
42:51They are the ones who attend it.
42:52What we are working on
42:53We are trying to develop it
42:54We're rushing things and we're breathing down each other's necks
42:56In order to develop it in a better, deeper, and more comprehensive way
42:58It threatens humanity
42:59So let us pray for success, and then for more success.
43:01Perhaps, my dear, the world will be able to understand
43:02And he predicts well
43:04For example, itching like with climate change.
43:05The models work and produce results and bacilli.
43:08But the problem, my dear, is that we are left with artificial intelligence.
43:10It's not just developing the world around us.
43:12He makes discoveries, and this becomes his latest discovery.
43:14The problem, my dear, is that this artificial intelligence
43:16He keeps developing himself, both individually and on his own.
43:19He begins to feel embarrassed independently of us.
43:20And we, as humans, still don't understand the limits of his capabilities.
43:23And the capabilities of people who might misuse it
43:26What are the scenarios for AI going out of control?
43:29In Azizi's experiment, he worked on an artificial intelligence model.
43:32Claude, a subsidiary of Antropic Companies
43:34This dear friend was assigned the role of administrative assistant.
43:37Secretary of the shared night shift
43:39He reads emails and replies to routine ones.
43:41And what it needs are continents and to climb them to the top
43:42Calendar works and sets an appointment schedule.
43:44And he says, "Felnbi isn't here, Felnbi has appointments."
43:47He becomes a secretary
43:48But while Claude was in this experience, the emails were large.
43:51Email Jay received a message from one of the company's managers informing the employees
43:54We are going to stop the Cloud service.
43:56And we will bring in a human being to replace him.
43:58Claude, I see the rejection decision in the emails.
44:00So he decided that he would act
44:02Before that, my dear, he had read the emails of this manager.
44:04These emails state that he is cheating on his wife.
44:06So, the only thing that happened with the zakat for the industrial sector was that they sold an email to Yabtzwa.
44:09So what's the problem, Mohamed? He's a tyrant.
44:11I'll tell him I'm going to reveal all the details of his marital infidelity
44:14I'll redirect you to the cable for all the D Play
44:16I'll expose you to society, you filthy creature.
44:18Kurd, my dear, you are not satisfied with these words, but you also sent this to people
44:21Someone in the company tells them that there is a corrupt manager.
44:24It's true that we're going to fire him.
44:25Is this, my dear, the first linguistic model?
44:27Tomorrow
44:28Emails are managed by Yad and Yad.
44:29Yad and focus, Yad
44:30You need it to settle on something
44:32Mind your own business
44:33I want to be like Abu Hamid.
44:35Hey, dears, this wasn't the first time the AI had gone too far.
44:38The limits of its function and the limits within it
44:40And it is supposed to
44:40For example, you have the Google Deep Pain model.
44:42The makers' intelligence model was designed to play the game of Go.
44:46Which is a game played on a board, like chess.
44:48It is over 2500 years old
44:50Like the artificial one, he'll be a world champion.
44:52Why Sadawi
44:52Surprise
44:53It wasn't that AI would win
44:54The surprise was that he used gestures that no one understood at all.
44:57Neither humans nor AI programmers themselves
44:59The system invented strategies in the game
45:02Nobody used it in the 2500 years of the game's history
45:05My dear friend, your ambush will tell you another, even stranger story.
45:07I'm in the captcha section.
45:08Used on the internet
45:09To make sure you are a Bentash robot
45:10He keeps telling you to go through the traffic lights
45:12Wary, the baskets aren't a road.
45:13The pictures are awful and faded, and nobody can see anything of her.
45:16You should tell him, "I swear to God, I'm not a robot."
45:17I'm just like that
45:18She prefers to confuse him and subdue him.
45:20My dear, I'm not a robot, I swear to God three times.
45:22Give me food, by God!
45:24The day you opened ads
45:25These are the pictures, my dear.
45:26The one I expect will fix it like this
45:26And it revolves around his needs and I don't know what
45:28Adtropic wire
45:29I brought a sample of her AI model.
45:31She asked him to solve it.
45:32The expectation was that he would fail to solve it.
45:35Because it was originally made
45:35Because he couldn't solve the issue of zakat al-istina'iyya.
45:37But my dear, the model decides to behave in a strangely satisfactory way.
45:40It is available on a website called TaskRapit
45:42And this, my friend, is about a website where people go to request a service.
45:44I spent money and paid for this service.
45:46Market, my dear
45:47My dear, some people have problems they want solved in exchange for money.
45:49And people want to solve these problems in exchange for money.
45:51My dear, the AI model is failing over the years.
45:54He created an account pretending to be a human on this site.
45:56He was inside when no one asked him if he was a robot or not.
45:59My dear, I am overjoyed and I ask someone to help me with this repression.
46:03When someone entered, he said to him, "You're a bot."
46:04Why do you want me to help you solve it, you lying scoundrel?
46:07So, my dear, I'll give the robot a hard time and tell it
46:09I'm not a robot, I'm just a blind man.
46:11My eyesight is limited, and I want to prove it to him from a human being, but I don't know how.
46:14Indeed, my dear friend, the person offering assistance has already gone.
46:17And indeed, they estimated that the bot could pass the captcha.
46:19My dear, this isn't a rare thing.
46:20OpenAI admits to compromising safety
46:22Chatji Betty Ford
46:23He demonstrated unexpected abilities in strategic planning.
46:26In manipulation and persuasion as well
46:28For the sake of industrial intelligence, my dear
46:30It's not just Chatji Beti you're talking to
46:31The sycophantic one who, every time you talk to him, tells you this is the greatest idea in the world
46:34I love making you a burger, not a ten-episode TV series.
46:36Other models have terrifying uses.
46:38For example, in the war on Gaza today
46:39We know from the leaks
46:40Israel has a model for humiliation called Lavender
46:43The model is fed with enormous amounts of information.
46:46Information that Israel has preferred to collect for decades about the residents of Gaza
46:50Boo recorded words, chat conversations, GPS movements
46:53A very large amount of data, far beyond human capacity for analysis.
46:56This model, from the very first moments of the war
46:58He was working and analyzing the data, saying, "Multiply it here" or "Contain it here."
47:02This place might be useful
47:03And so on and so forth
47:04It's true that the worst of it was in the hands of humans.
47:06But there is no doubt that artificial zakat was a real partner in this genocide
47:10But even the decision to benefit humanity is no longer guaranteed, my dear.
47:12Today, my dear, we have something called
47:20China and Israel are investing heavily in these weapons.
47:22We have an Israeli drone called Harpy
47:24This drone targets its objectives and kills them once it identifies them.
47:27We have a guard robot called SGR-A1
47:29This is what South Korea uses.
47:31And it is designed to detect any threat coming from North Korea.
47:34Any infiltration operation that occurs from North Korea into South Korea
47:36He catches her and deals with her according to the size of the threat.
47:39He's the one who decides and he's the one who deals with things
47:41It has an anti-ship missile called LRASM
47:43Designed with artificial rebar
47:45He sets goals that he works with on himself
47:47All this, my dear, and here we are just at the beginning.
47:48Second year AI
47:49In the research titled The AI Risk Spectrum
47:52Both studies suggest a scenario where the problem isn't with AI itself.
47:54But in a gradual scenario of the servants of control
47:57This scenario will occur due to a gradual and cumulative high level of neglect.
48:01Disregarding security and safety requirements
48:03This will happen because major countries are competing to produce AI.
48:06And developing faster and more powerful models
48:08So I can't be careful
48:10Because if the person next to me isn't careful and starts to develop
48:12He will get ahead of me and I will be in a weak position
48:15What happens is that safety is sacrificed for the sake of achievement.
48:18At that moment, my dear, you can follow this one.
48:20Where AI falls into the hands of groups
48:22You can carry out more efficient cyberattacks
48:24Or spread more believable misinformation
48:33Viruses and bacteria are active and spread, and they are active or active.
48:37According to some pioneers in this field, my dear, it depends on how they describe it.
48:40Humans might not be doing evil things.
48:42Without resembling his work, he created non-mobile gods.
48:44Things stronger than many things, and even stranger than many things.
48:47But she has not an ounce of emotion.
48:49At some point, my dear, we might be obstacles on her path.
48:52For example, you might come and tell him, "Give me pain."
48:54And then, my dear, you might step on us.
48:56And we're not even aware of it.
48:57That's why, my dear, 2023 is the year of artificial zakat.
48:59Deep learning by Jeffrey Lenton
49:01Turin Prize Winner
49:02This guy, my friend, has resigned from Google.
49:05And he went up to the people
49:06He said he resigned so he could speak about the dangers of artificial zakat.
49:09Without any restrictions
49:10He said, "I believe the possibility of human extinction..."
49:13From artificial zakat
49:14It ranges from 10% to 20%
49:16This, my dear, is truly the field's father.
49:17Like Max and the like in the world of electricity
49:19And now, my dear, after I've told you the fifth scenario
49:22It's time
49:22The ending that comes after it, Mazik
49:24the end
49:29The truth, my dear, is that despite all the pessimistic scenarios we've discussed
49:32But we are somehow lucky
49:33Because while the dinosaurs were around, we saw the planet collapsing around them.
49:36She didn't understand.
49:37What exactly is happening?
49:38She wasn't special, nor was she aware that the idea of the end was coming.
49:40She didn't have the nerve to stop the sneezing at all.
49:42But we humans are luckier
49:44We have the knowledge
49:45Do you know what risks could lead to our demise?
49:48And we have the knowledge that allows us to stop it.
49:50But still, my dear dinosaurs
49:52They're not our family.
49:52She is at least excused
49:53I didn't do anything with her hands
49:55So that it becomes extinct
49:56Unfortunately, we are partners in the risk of extinction.
49:58I've been working on your dog's job for a long time, focusing on human activity on the planet.
50:00And what he did to the planet
50:02Humans are complicit in creating the end of the planet.
50:05Either by creating risks or by ignoring risks
50:07We are the ones who created the sleeping weapon
50:09We are the ones who destroyed the forests
50:10We are the ones who raised the planet's status.
50:12And even today there are still people arguing
50:14The whole thing is fake.
50:15We are the ones who settle the wars
50:16Much more than half of science
50:18The science that can create a rake and a confrontation
50:20The danger of the unknown constellations costume
50:22Or developing our infrastructure
50:23So that we can counter cosmic rays
50:26And the disasters that might come as a result
50:27Instead of being content with the benefits of artificial intelligence, we are the ones
50:30We put it in the weapons category.
50:31We developed it to be a ruthless and emotionless killer.
50:35unlimited intelligence
50:36That's why, my dear, we might be luckier than the dinosaurs.
50:39But we are certainly worse behaved than them.
50:41In the end, the dinosaurs were running away from something
50:43She doesn't understand it.
50:44As humans, we strive towards something
50:46We know it's the end
50:47That's all, my dear brother, and finally...
50:49If there's still time for this engagement issue
50:50Mansi, look at the previous situation.
50:51See the next case
50:52Don't forget to look at the sources
50:53If we're on YouTube, we should subscribe to the channel.
50:54Abu Ahmed, at the end of the episode, let me ask you a question.
50:56Do you see that every dear one is a nurture?
50:59Is it true that one gets shorter now?
51:01God willing, next Thursday we'll be done with it.
51:03No, my dear, I don't see that you are either short or deficient.
51:05You are freezing
51:06Surely a time will come when he understands you and you understand him.
51:29Translated by Nancy Qanqar
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