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00:00Be careful
00:01The choice you make will determine what happens for the next four years.
00:04You choose blue
00:06Nor red
00:08Hey, why is your face like that?
00:10Make any notification
00:11Oh, my brothers, I'm squeezing my nose
00:12Because I don't understand anything
00:14What do you mean by that?
00:15America's actions are something the whole world needs to pay attention to and see.
00:19Especially you
00:20that I?
00:22I am from Daqahliya
00:23Egyptian peasant Arab
00:24What do you say to the topic?
00:26How so?
00:27I don't want Malik to have my opinion
00:28In the face that the world found you
00:30Each pill has its own face
00:31Your opinion doesn't matter anyway.
00:33But the ones we have are democrats and all that
00:35Haaaaa and Kali
00:37Okay, what does this red pill do to blind people?
00:40This?
00:41Republican pill
00:42Right-wing conservative
00:44Who loves the governor?
00:45A respectable and indebted man, his tone was never late for anyone in the circle
00:48Governor of Iwo?
00:49I'm talking about a conservative party
00:52It means he loves values, family, the state, the law, and the free market.
00:56I swear it's beautiful, this is excellent
00:59Oh, that red pill!
01:00But they will steal Metroloc
01:02They will control your economy
01:04They will wage wars in this region.
01:05Karak Tours
01:07My land
01:08and Metro
01:10No, no, no, no
01:11Please don't...
01:13What does the Zala tour do?
01:14This is the democratic pill
01:16Why the needle?
01:17Right of vacant land
01:18And whether
01:19Equal opportunities for all
01:20They are without
01:22Bring me a water jug.
01:23And I'll swallow the zarja
01:25Be careful
01:26But they will steal Metroloc
01:27They will control your economy
01:29And they will make letters in your area
01:30Yes
01:31And don't you dare ask?
01:32O Truth
01:33Oh father
01:34Oh our country
01:35You have to choose one
01:36Will it make a difference?
01:37You are not a world of Barcelona
01:40What's wrong?
01:42Well, you have no duty
01:43Dear viewers
01:47Peace and blessings of God be upon you
01:47Welcome to two new episodes
01:52From the Al-Daheeh program
01:53In this episode, dear
01:54I'll explain it to you
01:55US elections
01:57Very complex
01:58During the US presidential elections
02:002016
02:01Candidate Hedary Clinton gathers
02:0366 million votes
02:04At the time when Donald Trump
02:06It gathers 63 million votes
02:08One year after Abu Ahmad
02:09She is a traitor who was arrested before Biden
02:10And I don't know
02:11No, my dear
02:12Donald Trump is the one who corrupted the presidency
02:13Isn't this forgery?
02:14No, my dear, there is absolutely no forgery.
02:16He told him
02:16As for the difference
02:17What are the three million votes for?
02:18We both say to you, my dear
02:19This isn't something we've seen before.
02:20In the US elections
02:21It happened before
02:221876
02:23and 1888
02:25And also the elections of 2000
02:26When Al-Jur lost to George Mushel, son of
02:28Although he had received more votes
02:30The question here, my dear
02:31How to get a larger number of Americans to vote for a particular president
02:34But my second day wins
02:35Is this the character of the hero or what?
02:37Let me tell you, my dear
02:37America has the most important democracy in the world.
02:40There is no text in the US Constitution
02:43It actually allows voters
02:44If they vote directly for the candidate
02:47It's not a secretary election
02:48Let's see who gets the most votes, and that's who wins.
02:50US elections rely on what is called the Electoral College.
02:54Electrocollege
02:55This is baptized by 538 delegates from all the American states.
02:59Countries, my dear, that vote and choose
03:01For example, in the 2016 elections
03:02Votes from 304 delegates
03:05Opposite 227 for Hillary
03:07That's why he won
03:08Lamoha Ziab Ahmed said, "I won't give you any initial impressions."
03:10And you tell me "Ahok" and you don't know how to mock me
03:13I'm telling you, stinginess is a problem now, stinginess doesn't understand.
03:14In his book, My Dear, a very short introduction to the American elections
03:18And the understanding of the type of how many pixels
03:19Sandy Maisel says
03:20The Electoral College system for electing the US president
03:23Even though the system is 207 or 30 years old, it's still going strong.
03:25What's wrong with you, Zahal? It's a very complicated system.
03:27To such an extent, my dear, that even the American demand itself struggles to fully comprehend it.
03:31Oh Narish, this is Ahmed
03:32And the white sitter doesn't know how to understand it.
03:34And I will understand him
03:34Hey darling, you're still stuck in the past, get your brain working.
03:37It's normal, you understand him, but he doesn't understand you.
03:38Stay strong
03:39To understand this system, we need to go back to a much earlier moment.
03:42The moment the American Constitution was drafted
03:45Dear viewers, America is now made up of 13 states.
03:48Still a startup country
03:49We are talking about the year 1787.
03:51The population of America was estimated to be 4 million.
03:54So that all of them can discuss the important issues in the country.
03:57For example, how do we choose a president, or on what basis do we appoint him?
03:59Congress had to deal with the People's Assembly
04:01And the representatives of the four million Americans
04:04We can't think of and come up with rules for everything we want to think about.
04:08The blood of the four million
04:09So we will bring representatives for them.
04:10Here a question arises
04:11How many representatives will each state have in Congress?
04:14At the Constitutional Meeting in Philadelphia
04:15The one who dealt with it in the same year, 1887
04:18Some people suggested that all states should have the same number of representatives.
04:21Social justice, the quota system, and fairness in distribution, etc.
04:24This invention is intended to appear fair.
04:26However, he upset the larger states.
04:28States with the largest population
04:30They argued that it was necessary to send them a larger number of representatives.
04:33Here, the representatives of the smaller states fall silent.
04:35They say, "Are you older or what, guys?"
04:37No, of course not.
04:38They saw that this decision
04:39This will leave them at the mercy of the larger states.
04:41And that's where the disagreement started, my dear, and the disagreement escalated.
04:43To the point of threatening the approval of the constitution itself.
04:46That's why it was necessary to make a compromise or compromise to save the situation
04:49The constitution is coming from the Americans, my brothers.
04:50The compromise here is that the American Congress remains two chambers.
04:53House of Representatives and Senate
04:55The House of Representatives will have a number of representatives from each state.
04:58It depends on the population density of the state of D
05:00The House of Representatives grants the request of the large states
05:02By God, folks, we have a huge population deficit.
05:05We need to have representation that we admire.
05:08Listen up, small states
05:09This is where the Senate comes in to appease the smaller states.
05:12Its system remains composed of two representatives for each state.
05:15Victory is not dependent on the size of the state or its population.
05:17This settlement will be known as the Connecticut settlement.
05:20Hello, my dears, what we talked about
05:21That's the easy part.
05:23The easy part is, now it's difficult to figure out how we're going to elect the president.
05:25These are the states that are still divided amongst themselves.
05:27On the treachery of the deputies and the number of representatives
05:29They were different in everything except one thing.
05:31It's unacceptable for the president's authority to exceed that of our 13 states.
05:35So that he doesn't turn into a dictator
05:36Especially since the Americans had just emerged from a bitter war of independence against Britain.
05:41So we want Hassan from among them.
05:43Each state emerged with independent powers.
05:45It would be impossible to give it up
05:47Isn't it our right to fight and take back our independence?
05:48And then someone comes looking for all of us
05:50America's Founding Fathers
05:52They considered this issue very sensitive.
05:53Because the states were suffering from chaos, unrest, and economic problems.
05:57The union of the states itself was hash
05:59The slightest sneeze will kill him
06:00The slightest cold makes these people generous to each other.
06:02Bring him a civil war spear to humiliate him
06:04Mohammed, it's okay, Abu Hamad
06:05I feel you've complicated things; the matter is simpler.
06:07The entire nation is more important than the 4 million brothers.
06:09They're coming down, this year is almost here
06:10And we remain having achieved easy democracy.
06:12The one without squeezing
06:14Describe to you, my dear, we are still in the eighteenth century
06:16No country relied on direct elections.
06:19And there was a country that relied on direct elections.
06:21So, the 4 million Americans you see are just sitting around like that
06:24They were spread along the eastern coast of the Atlantic Ocean
06:26A distance of 1100 meters, like the coastline.
06:29This was at a time when he was, of course, there
06:31Difficulty in movement and communication
06:33Can you imagine what the election campaign will look like?
06:35It's impossible for 18 candidates to win all these elections.
06:39And he works on advertising: where, how, and how much?
06:41My dear, there was no internet, no radio, and no television.
06:45Not even Mike
06:46He was a candidate to speak to the people, Taha, to go
06:47There's another problem too, my dear.
06:48What if these elites made the wrong choice?
06:50They reached them and were nominated somehow
06:52He tricked them and knew how to get their votes
06:54People in America thought and said
06:55We, the people, are the ones who built Congress.
06:57Congress in America is the one that chooses the president.
07:00But my dear, if you were as experienced in democracy as that
07:03You will realize that this threatens a very, very important principle in the world of modern governance.
07:08It is called the principle of separation of powers
07:10This is a joke. We have a legislative authority that makes the laws, which is Congress.
07:14And the executive authority is the one who implements, and that is the president.
07:17And the judicial authority that rules between all countries and after
07:19Because any country that works properly
07:21The name of each authority from the countries remains separate from the following.
07:23If Congress is the one that brings the president in, it will have him under its thumb and he'll do as it pleases.
07:26It's unacceptable for the legislative authority to be the one that chooses the executive authority.
07:28My dear, other voices are telling you
07:30Congress intervened sideways
07:31The legislative council of each state is the one that chooses the president.
07:34Well, this solution by Muhammad seems logical.
07:36Honestly, my dear, this is dangerous.
07:38That way, the incoming president will fix the state councils that nominated him.
07:42The beating is directed at those who were not nominated.
07:44And just as the union is weak and any cold war will bring it civil war, we are not prepared for that.
07:48That's why the Americans said, "Just like we resolved this Congress issue through compromise."
07:52We too here must resort to a middle ground.
07:54A need between direct settlement and state selection
07:56Each state is supposed to have two representatives in the Senate.
07:59That's how it is, included among them
08:00Each state also has members in the House of Representatives.
08:03According to the size of the state
08:04So we will choose a group of representatives from each state.
08:07Their number is determined according to the total number
08:10For members of the Senate and the House of Representatives in each state
08:13And then there are the countries that vote as representatives of the American people.
08:15The delegates are the ones who are delegates, meaning
08:17They will form what is known as the Electoral College
08:20So, my dear, you might be in a state after me, let's say California.
08:22Mostly selected, a specific candidate
08:25This delegate can choose the second candidate.
08:27The second candidate, if the number of votes among the delegates is in his favor
08:31He's the one who wins
08:32The assembly here is what decides, regardless of the wishes of the residents of each individual state.
08:37According to political science professor George Edward
08:39When the founding fathers reached this agreement
08:41They didn't see that they had reached the ideal form of elections.
08:45Okay, honestly
08:45In short, and between you and me, my dear, because this is a secret I know.
08:48Some of the founding fathers have a lot of coffee with them.
08:50Fathers, my dear, are fathers
08:51This great effort exhausted them
08:52They were finally free from the many divisions and civil wars
08:56They had to find a middle ground.
08:57They feared that the union between them would fall apart.
08:59The states were so complicit that even Washington, D.C., didn't have the right to film.
09:11Affiliated with the government and the president
09:13You will have no influence in the democratic process.
09:15Belly of Menko, O States
09:17The capital isn't the one that will take all the money, resources, and everything else.
09:20No, the capital will have no voice.
09:22Those states that choose someone to govern should come and enlighten.
09:25The situation, my dear, will continue until 1961.
09:28When she is finally allowed a third of the votes in the Electoral College
09:32And she still has a share in the Luab Conbus
09:34But they have no right to vote on any law.
09:36This continues to this day.
09:37Yes, my dear, the electoral college system will be implemented.
09:40On February 4, 1789, he was elected by George Washington
09:44As the first President of the United States of America
09:47He remains the only president in American history.
09:49The one who elects the electoral college unanimously
09:53My dear, this offer could pay off all of America's debts.
09:55He puts his picture on the dollar bill.
09:56This is of course, my dear, a reference.
09:59People were there, according to a rumor.
10:00If the Imam returns, he will settle Egypt's debts, and with his whip, the pound will plummet.
10:03True, as the system solved one problem, but it created new problems.
10:07Take this, my dear, it seems to you that what is this, Abu Ahmed?
10:09This was a success, and they all voted unanimously.
10:11They will all remain successful, united, and working together as one.
10:14And that's it, there are no more problems and we succeeded.
10:16It's clear that the idea of ​​this electoral college was an idea specific to Abu Ahmed's village.
10:19Let me tell you that the electoral college system did indeed solve the problem.
10:22But he created new problems
10:24Like I told you, for example, my dear, the population of the state is what determines this state.
10:27How many representatives will she have?
10:30Hey, the House of Representatives isn't the council of the sheikhs, so keep that in mind.
10:32The state's population also determines how many representatives each state will have in the Electoral College.
10:38But here's a question, my dear: who are the original inhabitants?
10:41The question that seems easy is, "Karno is very friendly."
10:44Who are the residents whose numbers determine the vote of each state in America?
10:49Is there anyone we can call a resident?
10:52Ah, Abu Ahmed, it's clear that the head of the committee is J
10:56Let me tell you, my dear, the electoral college system is in its early stages.
10:59How many people are considered to have the right to vote?
11:01Or what do we consider to be residents?
11:03His age is in two categories
11:04Free white men, not rich
11:06Those countries, my dear, at that time were only 6% of American society.
11:09Oh Lord, help
11:10My dear
11:10Let me tell you that, for example, at the time the constitution was being drafted
11:1340% of the population of the southern states were enslaved Black people.
11:17In the state of Virginia, Black people made up 60% of the population.
11:20If the population of these countries is counted
11:21These states will still have their own expectations.
11:23Therefore, it has more users.
11:25More representatives in the House of Representatives
11:26Oh Messenger of Abu Hamid, what is this problem?
11:28The Americans are doing this in the Azada situations.
11:29Tell me one second, I'm coming
11:31As usual, my dear, solutions begin to emerge, just like in the middle.
11:34In the form of a settlement, like the three-fifths settlement
11:37Simply put, my dear, it depends on the principle
11:38I'm honestly too shy to tell you.
11:40But they, my dear, decided for some reason
11:42They count every five black people as three
11:44It's like charging 100 and talking at 70.
11:46Honestly, my dear, I'm not from that school
11:48We judge the past by our present standards.
11:51But in the end, I still get ripped off and make a living.
11:54I love rocks from the second time of art
11:56But not personal belief
11:58First, in the 19th century, with the formation of new American states.
12:01Then, by God's grace, they began to grow up.
12:02Remember, even though they started at 13
12:04Then they reach a lifespan of 50
12:05Here, the right to vote will be decided for any white man.
12:07But his age must be at least 21 years old.
12:09The situation was not the same in most states
12:10After a long period, the horns will straighten to age 18.
12:12So, my dear, thank God we solved the egg problem.
12:15But what about the black women and men?
12:16Their problem was much more difficult
12:18Black women, of course, may God help them.
12:20And the black women of Giza
12:22So, they might as well commit suicide?
12:23And of course, besides the problem of transgender Black women
12:25Paragraph
12:26Problems, my dear, with black people and women
12:28And the black women were much harder
12:30Especially regarding the voting issue
12:31So I'm telling you, the year 1868
12:33America is recovering from the Civil War
12:34The states secure the 14th Amendment to the Constitution
12:37The one who grants American citizenship
12:39For anyone born or naturalized in the United States
12:42What does this mean, my dear?
12:43Those who were previously called slaves
12:45They became American citizens
12:46And indeed, they would gain the right to vote in 1870.
12:49God bless you, Abu Hamid, you have finally achieved justice.
12:52And you believe in racism?
12:53My dear, this is just ink on paper.
12:55You were deceived
12:56Still, still, still, still
12:58Just because it says "I" on the outside of the shop doesn't mean that
13:00Everything costs 2.5
13:01Everything costs 2.5
13:02You, my dear, are only now realizing that there was a Malcolm X?
13:04Martin Luther King Jr. and Django Unchain
13:06There's still a civil rights movement coming, my dear.
13:08Black people in the southern state are still
13:10They'll stay for another hundred years
13:12Because the states
13:12You will be creative in creating obstacles
13:14Disobeying them from voting
13:16For example, you have the state of Georgia
13:17You will overcharge for voting
13:18If you go down and eat, you'll be exhausted.
13:20What? Hatfnous
13:21Voting fee 50 Egyptian pounds.
13:23Our brothers are not in America.
13:24And when a black person comes along, he pays taxes to do something
13:26Oh my God, my love
13:27You will pay all the voting taxes you missed.
13:29And you'll also pay them all in one payment.
13:30On the day the man was truly made
13:32So the man, instead of doing what he wanted, fell one day and they told him they were coming to do it to him.
13:36This issue, my dear, will disenfranchise Black people and the poor.
13:39Keep in mind that most Black people were illiterate and deprived of education.
13:42That's why they will be given tests, what is my mother?
13:45Even those who know how to read write
13:47He will be given difficult and complex questions.
13:49And the degree is as you say, Abu Ahmad
13:50One answer is wrong
13:51The doctor will catch the vote.
13:52He has to get full marks
13:53At a time when he didn't even take
13:55His right to education
13:57Yesut means dear
13:58What a problem, my dear
13:58He couldn't even do it
14:00The candidates are bringing him funding for the construction of more schools.
14:05In environments where Black people are prevalent
14:07The problem begins when you prefer to keep going
14:09I'll write it like this, my dear.
14:10That's the problem.
14:11I alone promised that all these obstacles
14:13You'll find other impossible conditions
14:15Like being from a family of fathers
14:17He had the right to vote before the war, a minority
14:19Or from the old warriors
14:21At that time the white man
14:22He had all the advantages
14:24And the facilities are that it exceeds all these conditions
14:26Oh Abu Ahmed, this is a strong element or hashish
14:27Hello dear, let me tell you something big
14:29Ahmad, please, no, I want Shami
14:30We were just out in winter
14:31My dear, I didn't mean this.
14:33I mean the big problem
14:34Women were disenfranchised.
14:36Until 1890
14:38When it becomes a state and a day
14:40The strangest state name in the United States of America
14:42It is the first state to give women the right to vote.
14:44To encourage states like those in the American West
14:47She imitates her
14:47But the resistance preferred to continue in the southern state.
14:50My dear, the situation is preferable as it is.
14:52Until 1920
14:53When the constitution approves the nineteenth amendment
14:56This is what gives women the right to vote.
14:59Complete, perfect, healing, hospitals
15:01That's great news, Abu Ahmed!
15:02I am happy with the woman
15:03Congratulations, woman!
15:04You now have a voice in American politics.
15:07I feel
15:07Like the voting law, my dear
15:09For Black men, it was just ink on paper.
15:11So restrictions will also be placed in front of black women.
15:13So that you do not benefit greatly from this amendment
15:15Although the amendments exist legally and constitutionally
15:18So that Black men and women can participate in the electoral process.
15:21But I
15:22It surprised you and what you said
15:23From the year 1020 to the year 1030
15:25ten full years
15:26No one was able to vote in Georgia.
15:28From the Afro-American Community
15:30Only ten thousand
15:31Out of a total of 370,000
15:33That means less than 3% of Black voters
15:36They are from the continuous sound
15:36Although the voting tax was abolished in 1964
15:39Unless there are still obstacles facing voters
15:42The violence and intimidation have changed
15:43What was preventing them from participating in the elections
15:45Until the civil rights defenders organized
15:47Peaceful march from Albania
15:49In March 1965
15:50The march, my dear, was met with insubordination by the state's soldiers.
15:54tear gas
15:55A horrific and frightening scene captured by television cameras.
15:58For millions of viewers
15:59To the point that US President Lyndon Johnson
16:01He signs comprehensive voting rights legislation
16:04He forbids and excuses any howling that appears in front of African Americans.
16:08Or any minorities that prevent them from voting
16:10Because after two centuries, my dear
16:12We still have an electoral college system.
16:15All residents are allowed to vote
16:17For the first time since the days of the Founding Fathers
16:20Let it be, my dear, your own opinion
16:21We are telling the story of the elections
16:23Once from the perspective of the founding fathers
16:25Sometimes from the perspective of the states and sometimes from the perspective of the voters.
16:28So here's the question that comes to mind.
16:30What about the candidate himself?
16:32Let me tell you that in order to run for office in America
16:35You have to be imitated in America
16:36And your father is a copycat in it
16:38Or his father lived in America for no less than 14 consecutive years.
16:41My dear American president, you can't have him under 35 years old.
16:44unless
16:45So what are you asking, Abu Ahmad?
16:46They are the ones who are obstructing the issue, and we only see two presidents.
16:48He doesn't take it off the shoe
16:49They are the ones who nominate him
16:50Why is the final always such a temptation?
16:52What brought this on, my dear, is that the nomination process is expensive.
16:55Therefore, your chances are much better if you are with one of the two major parties in America.
17:02Democratic Party and Republican Party
17:04Abu Ahmad is correct.
17:05These countries always meet in the final.
17:06Be careful, my dear, these are not the only parties.
17:09In other American parties
17:10For example, the Green Party, Grim Party
17:12Let me tell you, my dear
17:13Of course, these existing parties are beautiful and sweet and all that.
17:15But in order to maintain a very, very, very strong chance in the elections
17:18You have to be in one of these two major parties
17:20Democratic Party or the Big Party
17:21You have to play for your family and your time to make it to the national team
17:23No, my dear, for a good reason.
17:24Each of these two parties defends its own opinions and beliefs.
17:27It represents millions of Americans
17:29Hamad, please tell me the difference between them.
17:31So that I know which party to run for office with, and which one to choose.
17:34The Republican Party, my dear, has candidates.
17:36Donald Trump, George Bush, Reagan
17:38Republican candidates
17:40Their opinion will be based on their sitting.
17:41The government, by the Prophet's name, should leave her alone.
17:43It has no support for rape.
17:44She removes her hands from health and social care.
17:47The market is left to regulate itself freely.
17:49This makes it the preferred party of the rich.
17:52Because it imposes lower taxes on them.
17:54What's the point of this government not being organized or needing anything from the people?
17:57We also exempt the song from the minimum wage increase.
18:01So I'll give you the money that the market allows.
18:04Even if you have more to do with her
18:05As for the Democratic Party, which is represented by candidates
18:08Biden and Barack Obama
18:10This encourages the government to spend more on health and social care.
18:14And it raises the minimum wage
18:15He also tends to impose higher taxes on songs.
18:18Remember, my dear, in the episode about the Depression when we talked about Frank Roosevelt?
18:21Do you remember what this man did?
18:22Or this guy was a Democrat
18:24Mohammed, you're unlucky, you're a mess.
18:25any?
18:25Yes, Abu Hamid, you are being simplistic in your summary.
18:27So the difference wasn't just in terms of efficiency.
18:30That's true, my dear, but that's why I'm telling you.
18:32Be patient with her.
18:32Of course, my dear, that's a gross oversimplification, and the issue isn't about good and evil.
18:35The world isn't black and white.
18:36What are the differences between them?
18:37Much more hateful than that
18:38Indeed, there are journalistic differences, for example
18:40For example, the two parties differ on matters that are subject to debate.
18:42For example, the right of an individual to bear arms
18:45Republicans love guns
18:46The Democrats are telling you, folks, to stop.
18:48On the other hand, my dear
18:49Democrats love marijuana
18:51Republicans are telling you, "It's free!"
18:52You also have the right to answer
18:54They support the Democrats and oppose the Republicans.
18:56Republicans usually tend to be more conservative.
19:00More religious
19:01The right of him
19:02We can say, my dear, that the Republicans are trying to maintain the status quo.
19:06Why aren't you bringing in new immigrants?
19:07Don't take the weapon I've had for years.
19:09Countries that don't walk, we won't forgive them
19:10While Democrats are more open to changing the status quo
19:13In case the damage increases
19:15No, Abu Hamad, let him be, he'll get into trouble with some of them.
19:16Hamlash invitation
19:17My dear, I tell you, how can we not have a great invitation or
19:19By God, Abu Hamad, we are attending the princes' elections.
19:21No, no, my dear, we have nothing to do with this.
19:23But we are captivated by what is happening.
19:25Captivated by the background of the American president
19:27The difference between the two parties extends to foreign policy.
19:30Therefore, this is how America deals with other countries.
19:33For example, Republicans tend to favor military forces more than Democrats.
19:37Do I live as proof of this statement?
19:38For example, you have the Iraq War, which George Bush ended.
19:40The Democrats, on the other hand, like to play it diplomatically, politically, with sanctions and things like that.
19:44Of course, my dear, that doesn't mean they aren't going out and shooting down ordinary planes.
19:47But what's wrong with him? He doesn't go around cheating.
19:48And secondly, my dear, the matter is more complicated.
19:50Because the Democrats also have a dark history, I mean
19:52All of it, my dear, all of it, is a dark history.
19:54It's just lineage and lineage
19:55tendencies
19:57I think, my friend, that I've given you your complete and comprehensive guide to running in the American elections.
20:04I knew you throughout history
20:05I knew you, the history of the states
20:07The electoral process taught you how to handle it and how to deal with it.
20:09I know the two parties that are vying for it, and each one has its strengths and weaknesses.
20:13So now you are a ready candidate for the US presidency
20:20Leave the real issue of finance, my dear.
20:22Spike, I'm a person
20:23To be a respectable candidate and spend on your campaign
20:26Your party will help you.
20:27But this is where non-governmental political action committees come into play.
20:32Super Bucks
20:33The Political Action Committee
20:34These, my dear, are pressure groups
20:35Representing entities
20:36These entities support specific candidates to advance their interests.
20:40They pass laws to benefit her and bury the laws that benefit her.
20:43For example, the Zionist lobby
20:44AIPAC
20:45Or oil and pharmaceutical companies
20:46Or even Giphy companies
20:48Anyone with money and a vested interest in the country can lobby
20:51Whether this was a group of American or non-American companies
20:53BlackBerry America has interests and businesses within America.
20:56You have all the money, go ahead.
20:58It's all about money, my dear, and for the sake of money.
21:00I was thinking, my dear, before you went around to the lobbies and took money by force.
21:04These entities cannot give money directly to the candidate.
21:07That would be bribery.
21:08Direct donations must also be subject to a maximum limit.
21:11You can't donate that
21:12But I was on your mind, my dear
21:13We are in America, the land of freedom, the land of expression.
21:16And in the freedom of speech law guaranteed by the American Constitution
21:19These entities have the right to spend millions on campaign advertising for the candidate.
21:22Who is this, my dear, from the two parties that serves the interests of the song?
21:26Many institutions and companies now express themselves freely.
21:28And it's being used for Republican Party propaganda.
21:31The biggest beneficiary of the Super Bucks
21:33With this type of funding, the Republican Party receives the lion's share of Super PAC contributions.
21:37This, my dear, makes the Republican Party nominee an office in himself.
21:41Usually, my dear friend, the Republican Party is the party that benefits most from these Super Pak elections.
21:46Every party, my dear, has its own candidates.
21:49Candidates to become the Republican or Democratic nominee
21:53This means there are elections held within the party before there is a candidate from each party.
21:56And the elections, my dear, are extremely important.
21:58Because each party won't enter the elections with just a few people.
22:01He divides the votes, splitting them before him, and wins.
22:03We must direct all our strength as a party towards one goal.
22:06In order for this candidate to reach this position, we need to hold elections amongst ourselves.
22:09Therefore, the party needs to identify its candidates from within first.
22:12Through what are called party elections and primary elections
22:16Party elections are meetings organized by each party in large halls in the state.
22:20And it ends with the attendees voting for Rafeh Laqeen.
22:23They describe the candidates among themselves
22:24But this method, my dear, ended in 2016.
22:26And it's only continuing in states like Iowa and Nevada.
22:29The most common type is primary elections.
22:31The ones we hear about on television
22:33Here the party presents its candidates to the people
22:35Voters in each state will vote directly.
22:38Who do they want to represent the party in the end?
22:40When you think about America
22:41Treat it as a continent, not necessarily a country.
22:44Remove the word, my dear, about the states
22:46Each state has its own system in principle.
22:49The states, my dear, are more like small countries within the continent.
22:52Kteer State, my dear, is bigger than these countries.
22:54And the economies of many states are larger than those of countries.
22:56California, my dear, is one of those states.
22:58This is a central state, SUPERM, states
23:00Found in Tibet among the world's economies
23:03This means California's economy is larger than Saudi Arabia's.
23:06The UAE economy and the Egyptian economy
23:07danger contains state together next to countries
23:09This includes India, China, Japan, Germany, and France.
23:14And some of the classifications, my dear, are number five or six on the world scale.
23:18Fidyah is a state, of course some states are vast.
23:20Texas covers approximately 70% of Egypt's area.
23:23Texas covers an area of ​​approximately 700,000 square kilometers.
23:26Egypt is one million square kilometers
23:27Each state is like a country with its own laws.
23:30Especially regarding the primary elections.
23:32For example, you have states that rely on a closed system.
23:35This means that whoever votes in the state will vote in favor of the party's candidate.
23:37It can't be just anyone
23:38The voter must be registered as a member of a specific party.
23:41He's the only one who can vote in his party's elections.
23:43For example, you have the open system
23:45It remains the right of all residents of the state
23:46If they vote in the primary elections
23:48Even if they weren't members of the party
23:50Of course, an open system is superior to a closed system.
23:52It increases the participation rate
23:54But the problem, of course, is that sometimes it allows playing
23:56So, the Prophet is bald like that?
23:57If I were in the Democratic Party
23:58And I see that there is a weak candidate in the Republican Party
24:01I'm going to vote for him.
24:02He said, meaning I'm a Republican.
24:04And I'm leading my candidate, Al-Azab.
24:06Hassan is the one who will run in the next elections.
24:08He loses to the Democratic candidate.
24:10The one I support
24:11I was thinking of you, my dear
24:12The primary elections are not decisive.
24:14Its goal is for each party to settle on its candidate.
24:17primaries
24:18It shows that sometimes there might not be a gap
24:20Between the opinion of the party leaders and the opinion of the people
24:22Like what happened in 1960
24:23When I dealt with the Democratic Party primaries
24:26At that time, most of the party's youth voted
24:28For candidates who are promoting a war of sedition
24:30Robert F. Candy costume
24:31Meanwhile, party leaders pushed forward a pro-war candidate.
24:34Hubert Humphrey costume
24:35Although he didn't participate in the primary elections at all
24:37The Seddon had an impact on Humphrey's election campaign.
24:40And the Republican candidate who ran against him was the one who won, Richard Nixon.
24:42This sense, my dear
24:43The Democratic Party allowed voters
24:45They are the ones who chose the candidate.
24:47With elections for a representative in each state
24:48After that, the Republicans
24:49If that's a good idea, he told them
24:51primaries
24:52Filter flies weak candidates
24:54Final Father Preparation Camp
24:56Only the heavyweights who are capable of winning the election battle remain.
24:59After that, the party holds a national conference.
25:01In it, candidates present themselves under a delusion
25:02Presidential candidate
25:03And a candidate for the position of transporter
25:05But the delegates who were chosen
25:07Through the primary elections
25:09The delegates are usually chosen
25:11The same ones they chose
25:12Voters in the primary elections
25:14It's clear that people love so-and-so, the party is promoting him so we can remain president.
25:16So I will do something that people will love.
25:18But my dear
25:19They are not timely
25:20Ah, then, the lack of foot is a real problem.
25:22The delegate estimates the length and height of any candidate
25:24Even if the voters' opinion differs from that
25:26These delegates are called Super Delegations
25:28They represent approximately 15% of the total number of delegates.
25:31They are often leaders in the party.
25:32or former presidents
25:33or governors of states
25:34Mostly, my dear
25:35Official party candidate
25:36It will be clear, well-known, and expected.
25:38All he needs is to gather the votes of a majority of the delegates.
25:42Here, my dear, are the party elections.
25:43A pause for the delegates
25:45Should I tell you that the states with the largest number of delegates
25:47She doesn't have sole control over the selection of the party candidate.
25:49Sometimes the criterion is precedence, not majority.
25:52For example, you have a small state like Aywa
25:54She only has six votes in the electoral college.
25:56But it's very good simply because it's the first state to hold party elections.
26:02Mohammed, I feel that the American fighter jet has a wide engine on me.
26:05Honestly, my brain is tired and I can't...
26:07My greatest wish is to run for a sports membership and choose the class team.
26:10In the case of my dear friend, I ignited you with a proverb; I knew it was through the use of proverbs.
26:12In 2016, the Republican Party was a primary election factor
26:15Why are the candidates deluded and delusional, leading them to the states?
26:18Wait, let's see if any candidate is maneuvering or not.
26:20So that in the end the Republican Party chooses a single candidate
26:23When the party's election campaign began in Iowa
26:26Which, as we said, is usually the first state
26:28The Republican Party had put forward 12 candidates
26:30After the Iowa caucuses, three withdrew.
26:33From the twelve, from the first province they attacked
26:35They got tired and said, "What's this? It's clear we're not fit to be presidents."
26:38The elections that followed were held in New Hampshire.
26:40New Hampshire also has no representation in the Electoral College.
26:43But it's the second state to hold primary elections.
26:46After the New Hampshire primary elections
26:48Three more candidates will withdraw.
26:50Almost half of the candidates realized that Tariq was on their minds
26:52From the first two states that passed over it
26:54And other small states
26:56The candidates could be from countries where they were, for example, in California.
26:58They would stay with you for a month.
27:00They elect them
27:02And just like the candidates who were in the first place
27:04Sometimes candidates are also nominated from the beginning.
27:06Imagine you're the first state you started in
27:08It's the state you're in
27:10People in the state know you
27:12You accepted in the primary elections
27:14In Iowa
27:16So what are the people in the party saying, guys?
27:18There's someone who looks like he's going up there.
27:20He starts and focuses more on you
27:22Your opportunities begin to develop over time as you learn.
27:24He has two sprays, like a dark horse.
27:26None of them qualified from the group stage.
27:28When the Illinois senator
27:30An unknown man named Barack and Bama
27:32He is running for president as the Democratic Party candidate.
27:34In front of the party's top candidate
27:36Hillary Clinton is more famous than him
27:38This is the wife of President Sadiq.
27:40It means a very rigid and ambitious figure in American politics.
27:42Hillary was ahead of Obama
27:44By twenty points in national opinion polls
27:46But my dear, after a month
27:48Obama defeats her at the campaign convention.
27:50In Iowa
27:52Secondly, my dear, elections are a gift.
27:54They are nominated for nomination
27:56Within the same party, the Democratic Party
27:58Obama's victory in Iowa made him lose his temper.
28:00The highest number remains, and this is what Oban showed in the opinion polls.
28:02Therefore, his chances of collecting increased.
28:04Donations to his campaign to transform
28:06From a weak competitor to a real, existing competitor
28:08Without spoiling the plot, my dear, I mean, because
28:10I wasn't living with us on this planet for twenty years.
28:12So, he will become the president of America and grow up
28:14Oh, young Ashraf Abdel Baqi, I've finished speaking, my dear.
28:16The states of Iowa and Iowa are part of the United States.
28:18In one way or another, it controls the American president.
28:20Regardless of their size
28:22And the number of their representatives is simply because they are the first two states.
28:24The elections begin there, therefore
28:26The winner who comes out of there takes
28:28Greater media coverage
28:30One thing compensates for another, meaning the number of their representatives.
28:32And Lilaine will also have no influence in the elections.
28:34My dear dark-skinned sweetie
28:36Abu Ayoun Jari'a, the percentage of eggs
28:38In the two states, 90%
28:40Huh? And what about our respect?
28:42For all skin tones
28:44And all the talk of political correctness and all
28:46Things he sees on you in Nektense
28:48There is still discrimination and there is still
28:50Differences between white men
28:52The man who is not white
28:54So the question remained: are the two states countries?
28:56They represent the American people, if they
28:58They should make this decision decisively from the start.
29:00Of course, my dear, that's valid criticism, but still
29:02Think about it, Obama won there.
29:04His first primary election win was
29:06Yes, the truth, my dear, is that the Americans
29:08They tried to distance themselves from this jurisprudence and tried
29:10This doesn't mean that these two states should be the indicator.
29:12So, Floo Tamania tried to resolve the issue a little.
29:14They chose two states with ethnic diversity.
29:16The biggest Nevada costume and Carolina voices
29:18And they're the ones who vote, I don't know.
29:20They also allowed many southern states to vote on the same day.
29:22The one they called the Big Three
29:24Super Baxi Super Tees D Everything is Super
29:26If you would like, my dear Nita, to participate in the American primaries
29:28This super trio must be
29:30March 1st remains the last day of February
29:32The idea behind this is that when there is a larger number of representatives
29:34They are spread across these states and vote on the same day.
29:36This gives their voice more weight.
29:38This will therefore be a true test of the candidates' popularity.
29:40In the whole country
29:42That concludes the primary elections.
29:44So, my dear, each party is with its own candidate.
29:46The one who arrived after primary elections
29:48Difficult and exhausting, finally
29:50After a long journey and a wrap on
29:52States of the State of the State
29:54The candidate has transformed from a party candidate
29:56presidential candidate
29:58We haven't even started yet, people
30:00In the first three
30:02From November every four years
30:04Voters head to the polls
30:06The ballot box is for voting.
30:08For the candidate they consider best
30:10Indirectly, they vote for the delegates.
30:12Those in the electoral college
30:14The number of representatives will be 538
30:16And they are determined for each state
30:18As we said, it depends on the number of members of Congress in it.
30:20They also change according to population density.
30:22This is based on a ten-year census.
30:24California, for example, has 55 delegates
30:26While the state of Vermon
30:28It has 3 representatives, but only if we assume in the next elections
30:30Joe Biden came down and took it
30:32majority of voters
30:34for the state of California anyway
30:36The general public
30:38I went down and voted for him in California.
30:40Mostly important
30:42At 55 o'clock, a delegate
30:44Who are all obligated to finish, and what about the verdade!?
30:46All that the people chose
30:48Even if he won by a simple majority, my dear
30:50My dear, if he did 60% of the state of California
30:52We have 55 representatives there.
30:53Shouldn't 60% of the delegates say they will vote for Biden?
30:56And 40% of the delegates say they will vote for Trump.
30:59No! He won 60% and 40% in the state.
31:03So all 55% voted for Joe Biden.
31:06Why, my dear, are you sitting in the American elections?
31:08The dunes in the state take it all.
31:10Bigosh Winner Take All
31:11Whoever is elected in the state takes all the votes of its delegates.
31:14This system is in place in 50 US states.
31:17Delegates are generally obligated to vote according to the voters in each state.
31:22But this, my dear, is just a common custom.
31:25The word "manhood" has no basis in the constitution that obligates them.
31:27So, it happens in rare cases.
31:29The delegate votes for a candidate other than the one he pledged to vote for.
31:33And take the votes of the voters based on that.
31:34My dear, there's a phenomenon in American elections known as
31:37For example, my dear
31:39In the 2016 elections
31:403 delegates from Washington State
31:42My dear, other than Washington, D.C.
31:43So that no one laughs at you
31:44The delegates in Washington state are supposed to
31:46They gave their vote to Hillary Clinton against Trump
31:48Because the people of the state voted that way
31:50But what happened was that the delegates voted for Colin Bowney.
31:53Abu Hamid's outfit
31:54Yes, one second, Abu Hamid
31:55Didn't I say the match was between me?
31:56Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump
31:57From this third story
31:58That's a very valid question, my dear.
31:59Who is this third guy?
32:00My dear friend, he wasn't even a candidate in the first place.
32:02And the state's ordinary voters chose Hillary Clinton.
32:06By the name of my dear Professor Hillary
32:07The vote took place, but they understood what that meant.
32:08A third candidate is expected to convince the Republican Party delegates.
32:13If they give their vote to another Republican candidate
32:15Trump changed
32:16Which was clear he would win
32:17It means, my dear, that they don't just cast their votes against the will of the voters.
32:20They chose a third candidate from their own minds.
32:22He didn't even nominate himself.
32:23In the 2000 elections
32:24The Washington, D.C. delegate abstained from voting in protest.
32:28Because his state does not have full voting rights in Congress
32:31There are more than 30 states, my dear.
32:34Force the delegate to leave you
32:36Don't improvise
32:37What the people say, vote for it.
32:40You are simply a megaphone for the voice of the people.
32:42You are just a USB cable
32:44You're just a strange case that emerged from the problems of the Founding Fathers.
32:49The question here, my dear, is from the American government.
32:52As long as the people are the ones who elect the people
32:53As long as he is the one who chooses.
32:54Why all this confusion?
32:56Each state has a number of plaintiffs
32:58And the delegates from 30 states say
33:00They must represent the will of the people.
33:02And the other states aren't the same professional ever
33:04And people might not just choose the candidate who is most suitable.
33:06No, choose
33:07The candidate is not even part of the decision-making process.
33:09Why the anxiety?
33:10Shall I tell you, my dear
33:11After some states obligated the delegates
33:14If they choose what the people have chosen
33:15The topic didn't succeed, Awain
33:16Because the issue was related to financial penalties of that amount
33:20No more than a thousand dollars
33:21And hours, meaning he might drink his position
33:23Only a few states have a law
33:24It's possible the voice of the treacherous delegate will be silenced.
33:26Or he could replace him with another representative who embodies the will of the people.
33:30The episode, my dear, is actually not the real problem.
33:32The problem is that he's the one who controls the elections.
33:34The number of states is very small.
33:35Because the votes of most states are known from the beginning.
33:37There are many states known for their historical loyalty to the party.
33:40She will most likely vote for the Democratic Party or the Republican Party.
33:43Regardless of the candidate
33:44God willing, a moody person will come and take over America.
33:46As long as the Democratic Party follows California, the moody vote will persist.
33:49And Kamoun Ahmed and the campaign slogan change
33:51That's why, my dear, some candidates rarely put in the effort in some states.
33:55Although it could indeed be one of the largest states
33:58And its votes are the highest in the Electoral College.
34:00My dear friend, he still lets whoever actually controls the election results control them.
34:03States with fewer votes
34:05Its population is smaller
34:06But its historical date is unspecified
34:08Once upon a time, the blue of the Democratic Party
34:10And once the red-haired sons of the Republican Party
34:12My dear, you know what they call swing states.
34:15I'm sure you heard it on TV
34:17Swing States
34:18They even used to say Michigan
34:19Remember when they called it Michigan Swing States?
34:21So, Arab people, don't vote for Biden.
34:23Because this is an important state in the elections
34:26The results of Swing States Day determine the winner.
34:28Although her votes in the electoral college are not a camera
34:32For example, in the upcoming elections on the 24th
34:34According to the editing of his work, Exus
34:35There are six swing states.
34:36It is expected that these boys will be the ones counting the elections.
34:38Arizona 11 votes
34:39Georgia 16 votes
34:41Michigan also has 16 votes.
34:42Nevada 6 votes
34:43Pennsylvania 20 votes
34:44Wisconsin has 10 votes.
34:46These countries, my dear, are all that far away.
34:4779 votes
34:48Out of 538 votes in the Electoral College
34:52Our brothers are now countries
34:52Swing Doll
34:53They are the ones who will calculate the night
34:54That's why, dear candidates
34:56They will focus their campaign efforts there.
34:58That's great, Muhammad.
34:59Let's focus, don't get carried away too much.
35:01My dear, not the beautiful one
35:02This talk is dangerous, Kenta
35:03That's what it means, my dear.
35:03Only 6% of voters
35:05They are the ones who will determine the outcome of the elections.
35:07Between Biden and Trump
35:08Countries, my dear
35:08Those who are ignorant of them
35:10Billions allocated to election campaigns
35:12Mohammed Qariq now
35:14Why, my dear?
35:14Because this is the same ratio
35:16Which was included in Resolution 18
35:18We went through all of this
35:20So that we can return to the same situation
35:21The one that was in Resolution 18
35:22That was almost the same percentage
35:23Which will determine who will rule America at that time.
35:26The Road to Civilization is a circular battle
35:28It goes back to the same point
35:29The one who started from it
35:31The truth, my dear
35:31Over the course of decades past
35:33Opinion polls
35:34She showed that the Americans were dogs
35:36They prefer popular vote
35:37Live coverage of the Electoral College
35:39We want the people to vote themselves.
35:41Our vote goes to the candidate with the longest
35:43Why the representative?
35:43And then, this representative is one of those who...
35:45He was a divine representative
35:46The people believe that whoever wins by means of the people's sacrifices
35:48He is the one who ruled
35:48Although this electoral college system
35:50Old and made 237 years ago
35:53To obtain means
35:54It's not something new yet
35:55Unless we leave you alone and you say
35:56During this entire period
35:57More than 700 requests were submitted to Congress
36:00To cancel or modify it
36:02All of these requests were rejected.
36:04Decision to abolish the idea of ​​the Electoral College
36:06Approval is required
36:07Two-thirds of the members of the House of Representatives and the Senate
36:11This is in addition to the approval of 38 states.
36:12Many, my dear, from small states
36:14You will refuse
36:15He'll tell you that every candidate
36:16He's going to the fat states
36:18States with the largest population
36:20Because then it will be those countries that will make the difference.
36:22Important countries
36:23At that time, we won't have any impact.
36:24Regarding the presidential output
36:26Here, my dear
36:26One of the proposed solutions emerged
36:28To circumvent the electoral college system
36:31That is, the states expect an agreement
36:32The voices of their delegates
36:34It goes to the winner of the popular vote.
36:36At the US level
36:38Not at the state level, one state
36:39Meaning all of America
36:40All the American people
36:41Trump chose
36:42exploiting here
36:42This is a small detail in the text.
36:44It doesn't need fixing
36:44Meaning simplicity
36:45The delegates represented the voice of the state.
36:48Organized by custom
36:49If they implement the words of the people of the state
36:51Most
36:52That is, if the majority chose
36:53All delegates
36:54They will choose
36:55The one chosen by the majority
36:56What does someone who has chosen someone say?
36:57He tells you that all the delegates
36:59More than 500 international delegates
37:01They will all vote for the president.
37:04The one she chose
37:05The entire United States of America
37:08Even if he doesn't win in certain states
37:10The United States
37:11She will give him her voice in the end
37:13Because the second delegate is here
37:14They will represent the entire American people.
37:16That's it, my dear, officially.
37:17This delegate will be a complete honor.
37:18Not just a trumpet or a bugle
37:20This is a coaster
37:21Dear Garf Coaster, will you make me some tea?
37:22If it's not there, it's not necessary.
37:24I'll tell you, there are ten states
37:25They agreed to sign this evening
37:27Who among them?
37:28California and New York
37:29Those who were weighed were considered reliable in the electoral college.
37:31States that control approximately 165 votes
37:34alone in the electoral college
37:35My dear, you are lost
37:36It seems like a nice and clever suggestion.
37:37But there is one obstacle to its implementation.
37:40Indeed, the question is about your Prophet.
37:41The states that approved this proposal
37:43These are states whose loyalty lies with the Democratic Party.
37:46There is no republic among them.
37:48No swing state
37:49Dear student, the situation will remain the same.
37:51Come on, let's start, my dear.
37:53He takes Schengen and goes to Europe
37:54Non-street migration
37:55He jumps over the wall and goes to Mexico
37:57Although, my dear, the Americans have the right
37:58If they are proud of their political history
38:00And their attempts to find a settlement are always
38:03Between any conflict and a compromise
38:05Satisfies most people
38:06Not all of them, but most of them are, in one way or another, compliant.
38:09However, the American electoral system
38:10What's available now
38:11It makes millions of Americans feel
38:13Their voice is unnecessary.
38:14It has no relation to the final result.
38:16Just because they don't live in a state
38:18You can control the course of the elections
38:20A system that makes the percentage of citizen participation
38:22In the electoral process
38:23It is the lowest if we were to decide on it in most democratic countries.
38:26This regime is strange and unjust
38:28Other opinions see it as the most suitable system for governing the United States.
38:32Especially because of its nature
38:34According to American political expert Sandy Maisel
38:36The two-party system excludes independents.
38:38It also excludes the remaining candidates from other parties.
38:40It's like a derby match.
38:41It also obliges voters to support their party's candidate.
38:44Even his self-nomination isn't convincing.
38:45It empties a nation of 340 million citizens
38:48It only filters two candidates.
38:50They are often the best
38:52So, Trump and Biden are the two best in America?
38:54Dear Trump and Biden, these two are not the best two in their own country.
38:56Here, dear voter, he is forced to choose the least bad candidate.
38:59Even if he wasn't very convinced by it
39:01My dear Biden, he's reached an age where some people criticize him.
39:03He invented a method that caused memory loss and that he was no longer very familiar with details.
39:07He's not good at speaking and sometimes mixes up his words.
39:09Also, he's from a generation separate from the millions of young people who exist.
39:12Of course, Trump is dear to God.
39:14American politics are trying to turn into a circus.
39:15This man exacerbated the conflicts among the American people.
39:17His supporters occupied the Capitol building during his presidency.
39:20In what resembles a process of distorting and discrediting American democracy
39:23Honestly, my dear, I don't know 340 million Americans.
39:26But I don't feel that Biden and Trump are the best for both of America.
39:29There are much better people
39:30The American electoral system, according to experts and politicians
39:33A very attractive system from the outside
39:34But his playful nature makes him far from perfect.
39:37Again, my dear
39:38Because I just feel that just because he has problems doesn't mean he's a monster.
39:41But he is the better of the two monsters.
39:43And since we are aware that it is the lesser of two evils, we can always improve upon it and make it better.
39:47And that's what happened, that's what we saw throughout history, a year
39:50This system, for example, resolved a seemingly intractable constitutional crisis.
39:52The clock is ticking on a weak state that has been forming for two centuries, that it will become a great nation.
39:56It has a place in the world
39:57200 years, my dear, that's a nursery compared to other countries.
39:59200 years is for Egypt
40:01We're taking a nap, my dear, we're 120 years old
40:04Their name is the era of the first miller
40:05120 years ago, that was the era of the first shop.
40:09Amman, my dear, we hope the American people have a good president.
40:13We hope that the people of the world will also have a good American president.
40:16Because, as we said, the American president influences foreign policy.
40:19For the United States of America
40:20This affects us especially as people in the Middle East.
40:23That's it, my dear brother, and finally, some people
40:24We'll see the previous limit
40:25Look at the next one
40:26Download, look, and find the sources
40:27And we're on YouTube
40:28Subscribe to the channel
40:28As they please, sir.
40:29Choose whatever they want, at their leisure.
40:31It means, "Hold on, Mika Mohammedani."
40:32He said, "Repair it."

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