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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
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LearningTranscript
00:00Ah, finally, finally, Pierre!
00:05The picture was a success, and we lost King Louis XVI.
00:08It's time we achieved the goal of the image
00:10I'm now demanding that you execute all the singers who destroyed France.
00:15Congratulations to us, Mr. Maximilian
00:17I am very happy with the success of the image.
00:19But I was afraid that I would inform you that some of our sisters are from the Sawar tribe.
00:23They have a few demands
00:25And you see, you've really put them through their paces.
00:28any?
00:29There's absolutely no problem
00:31Execute them
00:32any?
00:33Why, sir?
00:34Countries of people who stood with the other picture
00:35Dear Pier
00:36If we just sit around and give in to this headache
00:40We won't be able to develop our country, France.
00:42Execute them immediately
00:43There's no time
00:43That's how they'll say we're betraying the image.
00:45Those who say "execute them too"
00:47Of course, we'll be executing a lot of people this way.
00:49And you are being executed by your own wolf, my love.
00:51King, O Beer
00:52You're not going to make me laugh these days.
00:53No, no, no, no
00:54I'm younger than you, Mr. Maximilian
00:56There's something else, but
00:58Fadl
00:59Now the Sad people are saying
01:00The picture was for men only.
01:02Political rights
01:03What's the point of all this?
01:04Did Sadat execute them all?
01:05Also
01:06I feel we should listen to them
01:09If we killed them all, we wouldn't have children.
01:11Yes, my dear, of course we must listen to them.
01:12But after we hear them, we present them
01:14any?
01:15any?
01:16Are there any other problems?
01:17The church is now very upset about what is happening.
01:19Ha
01:21I say it
01:23The church's breast?
01:24No, my dear, of course not
01:25Why is it wrong to demolish the church?
01:27I'm just telling you, Mr. Sayed is one of those people who are good.
01:29I believe what you are doing is against the principles of the revolution.
01:33That's it
01:34That's how it is, you son of a bitch!
01:36It's better to play outside
01:37To play one game with yourself
01:39How do I do this?
01:40Not a noble revolutionary
01:41You are degenerate
01:43Degenerate revolutionary
01:45What should I put in?
01:46I seek forgiveness from God, the Almighty, O Lord
01:52Hey guys
01:53Someone should execute the buffet guy.
01:57What are you doing with my pictures, sir?
01:58After the man's death
02:00This is a follower of Al-Dahih
02:08Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
02:11In the previous episode, we talked, dear reader, about the beginnings of the French photograph.
02:13We have reached a very important turning point.
02:15The people decide to execute the king.
02:17And indeed, the king is executed.
02:19The kingdoms of Europe are beginning to unite against France.
02:21What have you done?
02:23And the guillotine becomes the symbol of the journey
02:25Come, my dear, let me take you by the hand and we'll go back to the year 1792
02:28Specifically in September
02:30On the outskirts of a small village called Valmi
02:32Located in northeastern France
02:33A new French peasant volunteers in the Revolutionary Army
02:35Standing amidst his fellow soldiers
02:36The surrounding area is firing from all directions.
02:38The ground is shaking beneath them
02:39What's going on?
02:40The Prussian army is training a defender
02:42Prussian army
02:43It is said to France
02:44The French peasant volunteered, surrounded by fellow peasants
02:46That farmer, my dear
02:47And the soldiers around him left their homes.
02:49To defend revolutionary France
02:51The New Republic
02:52A cat predicted, my dear, that a war like this
02:54Between Prussia and a few French revolutionaries
02:57It ends very easily in Russia's favor.
02:59At that time, my dear, Prussia had the strongest army in all of Europe.
03:02It wasn't Prussia, it was Bern
03:04The surprising thing is that the available volunteers stood like lions in a battle known as the Battle of Valmi
03:09The French army was able to stop the Prussians
03:11He was able to successfully repel the attack
03:13The fairness, my dear, was very short and huge on a psychological level.
03:16The revolution has risen again.
03:18Because the very next day
03:19The French parliament, which is the National Congress
03:21The French parliament acknowledges the official end of the monarchy.
03:25Cancel this system
03:26and the founding of the First French Republic
03:28No one from the royal family after that.
03:29And let him tell me what this is about in a republic
03:30Europe, they wanted it to be something, and it was astonished.
03:32How could volunteer fighters defeat such a professional army?
03:35What is this? The strongest army in Europe?
03:37The famous German idiot, Buta, will say next
03:39From this day forward, a new era will begin in the history of this world.
03:42This is because the revolution proved to be a new force capable of changing all of Europe.
03:45Its strength isn't limited to France.
03:46This battle took place after the execution of the Russians and Austrians.
03:48In a statement that I later came to know as the Branzol statement
03:51A statement warning that Paris would be burned if any harm came to the monarchy.
03:55Sage Life has become a source of harm to the people, but
03:57And the French who didn't take it did more harm than good with a little effort.
04:00They touched the hair from the king's head
04:02They cut off all his heads
04:03But just like the French, they felt more afraid of the threat alone.
04:06Quickly, dear Europe, you formed an alliance against the French Republic.
04:09Group Carré, Republic of France, and its royal admirers in general
04:12And you've got your hands on these European Championship qualifiers, my friend.
04:14England, Austria, Spain, and also some Italian principalities.
04:17Normally, all countries, my dear, don't get lost.
04:19But they all join the fight against the image
04:21And it is clear that France was the one who instigated the war against Britain and the Netherlands.
04:24Because she saw that war was coming anyway, given the situation
04:26Especially when France occupied Belgium
04:28France occupied Belgium; Britain was not prepared for France to control these vital areas.
04:32France considered its presence in Belgium essential for the security of the revolution.
04:35She decided that she would declare war immediately.
04:37Since we're going to fight anyway
04:38Let's include first
04:39France is now besieged from all directions.
04:41The European army did not obtain anything from the land
04:42The famous English fleet obtained its ports from the sea
04:45For the first time in history, France made this declaration in August 1793.
04:49General mobilization and comprehensive compulsory conscription
04:51This means every citizen should leave politics and elections to their own devices.
04:55He comes to fight immediately
04:56Garlic is rinsed, held near a weapon, and then used to pay for the country.
04:59This is a very new decision.
05:01Because geography at that time meant professional armies.
05:03But suddenly, workers and farmers with middlemen and people sitting on televisions all night
05:07The tea they have is either a pickle or a sip of water.
05:09Suddenly today they're soldiers in an army, raising rifles, and poor people are the ones who took the picture.
05:13Who are they fighting? Europe
05:15I think, my dear, that the battle the French fabricated encouraged them and made them win again and again.
05:20But my dear, the fact that the soldiers are not professionals has led to a decline in the French tool.
05:24France is fighting a major battle
05:26A battle she lost by abandoning her, forcing her to withdraw from Belgium.
05:29General Demory, the former head of the committee in Belgium, was defeated.
05:32A month later he escaped and joined the Austrians
05:34The situation internally remains critical.
05:37The economy collapsed and prices skyrocketed in Paris.
05:40The Parisian people, especially the wealthy class, are known as Saint-Claudians.
05:44Or people who wear long pants
05:46This, my dear, was a burning thing; they distinguished themselves from the nobles who wore shorts.
05:51These people started putting pressure on the government because of the economic crises that existed in the country.
05:55Guys, I still don't know how to make a jam sandwich without bread. There's no such thing as a jam sandwich without bread.
06:00Under these circumstances, the revolutionary parliament was divided into two factions.
06:02The Giro denounced the countries that are afraid of violent extremism.
06:05On another note, the Gikobian
06:06The Jacobites were extremists in their views.
06:08And they want to take decisive action to save the images by any means necessary.
06:11On April 6, 1793, Parliament established what became known as the Committee of Public Safety.
06:16This emergency committee was established because of the war and consists of 12 members with very broad powers.
06:21This, my dear, will be the government of France, to lead France through its most difficult moments.
06:25Image time and war time: operations room
06:27The most prominent and crazy character in this picture, my dear
06:32He is the well-known lawyer Maximilian Robes-Ber
06:36Revolutionary lawyer, young and strict
06:38This man, my dear, had a clear, simple, and easy conviction.
06:41Whoever knows what this is, kill him.
06:42If you don't know what this is, ask about it, find out, and kill him.
06:44This man believed that the image needed a period of organized terrorism.
06:48The image needs to carry itself.
06:49He was saying that we must build a republic of virtue, even if we condemn violence.
06:53And that, my dear, is what happened next, very violently.
06:55In parallel with the external war with Europe
06:57The image was waging an internal cultural war
07:00Look, everyone, we want to cut off all ties with any royal and religious past.
07:04No one brings up the six of ownership, no one brings up the six of religion
07:07No voice is louder than the voice of the French image.
07:09Distribute it in French
07:10The issue, my dear, was bigger than you imagine.
07:12In September 1792
07:14There was no September 1792, my dear.
07:17What's up, Hamad? How?
07:18The image, my dear, has decided to destroy everything that is recognizable.
07:21I'm telling you, folks, this old Christ needs something from you.
07:24Even, folks, I need years, days, months, hours, and minutes.
07:28The content of the minutes is original; this is the topic of the sixty-minute hour.
07:31I'm not the one who's faulty, I just can't calculate.
07:33And this is a week of seven days.
07:34And a week of direct, strong, frankly
07:36No, no, not for me, my son, all this talk is for me.
07:38We killed the king, we won't know the point of the week.
07:40The one who loves my dear Robs Beer is one of the strangest tunes in the genre.
07:43The image will create a revolutionary new calendar
07:46First thing, my dear, is that we will change the names of the months.
07:48We will choose names for months that are related to nature.
07:50Instead of the topic of religious names
07:51Gasts and Mesh Bek
07:53After all, my dear, the month's name changed
07:54Their rest is called me, and three parts
07:55Each part is ten good
07:56It's related to the topic this week.
07:58I'm not happy, I want ten good people.
07:59So, my dear, the month that was four weeks
08:01Now in the French Republic
08:02Three dozen remained
08:03So, my dear, the paragraph about Ahmed Al-Saqah, the one about that, okay?
08:05Matzawini magazine, Mama
08:06Maximini Robs Bear
08:07This is the head of the magazine's analysis.
08:08Why are they telling you all this, my dear?
08:10Why?
08:11I'm breaking the routine of the "Kamisa" that people are used to.
08:13But the week
08:14He stayed for seven days
08:15People aren't going to sit around thinking anymore, folks.
08:17He finished his Sunday day among them.
08:19What are the good days and what are the bad days?
08:21We won't know
08:22The structure that crashed
08:23It's also an opportunity that people don't know when this good thing will happen.
08:25But perhaps most of the practical needs of the French Revolution
08:27It is extremism in the worship of reason.
08:29Two letters, dear
08:30They were trying to distract Christianity
08:31Religion replaces needs that we can reach intellectually.
08:35They replace it with the worship of concepts such as reason and freedom.
08:37This is because they saw the old religion as part of the system of purification.
08:41It seems, my dear, that the revolution is very strong on this subject.
08:43To the point that Robespierre himself felt this issue had escalated a bit
08:46We've gone a bit too far with the youth regarding this issue of religions.
08:48The week is normal, and the date isn't something everyone witnesses anyway.
08:50It works, but religion? No.
08:52In the man thanked for his handwriting, a new symbol of religion was introduced.
08:54He called it the Supreme Being
08:55A religion that preserves reason, nature, and freedom
08:57But in a spiritual way
08:59Spiritual
09:00In 1794, a large celebration was held in June.
09:03He called it the Feast of the Supreme Being
09:05There is confusion similar to artists' depictions of the clothing of the prophets of the Old Testament.
09:08And he worked as a large firefighter in the streets of Paris
09:10He began to steal people away from virtue and faith in the new god of the revolution.
09:14There are no church bells on Sunday anymore.
09:16There are no more republican celebrations or representations of freedom and reason.
09:19The streets were filled with music and revolutionary flags.
09:21The three times that will give you intestinal upset
09:23When you see them, religious people, in front of you at FIFA
09:25Neither blue nor white, and red
09:26If my mother finds a god other than Allah, she will run and attack the apostate.
09:29On this subject, my dear, I won't stop here either.
09:31We will start by trying to change the language.
09:32That's not all, my dear.
09:33The revolution tried to change people's ways and their speech.
09:35She no longer serves Mr. and Mrs.
09:37No citizen
09:38People call each other citizens
09:40Remind them of citizenship
09:41The goal was to create a new revolutionary human being.
09:44We'll send you wool, you'll say it's new
09:45Among the new ideas introduced by the revolution were women's and family rights.
09:48It's true the revolution didn't achieve complete equality between men and women.
09:51But it made very important choices, such as making divorce easier for women.
09:54And establishing equality in correspondence between boys and girls
09:57And also reducing the father's absolute power
09:59The authority that allowed a father to imprison his son by royal decree
10:02If he saw that he was the son of Aqab, for example
10:03And among the places that most embodied the idea of revolution and freedom, my dear, are
10:07The place is very far from Paris
10:08I'll tell you something else: it's very far from Europe.
10:10Where, Hamad, in the Caribbean?
10:12Remember the colony I told you would become a state? That's my current state.
10:14The one who doesn't know how to make a coffee clinker
10:16Sugar and coffee are made from it.
10:17On this island, the African slaves staged an uprising.
10:20In the largest slave revolt in modern history
10:22The revolution began with thousands of angry slaves
10:25They entered, my dear farmer, to burn it and kill their French lions.
10:28Their leader was a former slave who freed himself and built a powerful army.
10:31The revolution grew and became a full-fledged war of liberation.
10:34Here, my dear, there was a dalmah
10:35You, the revolutionary Parisian
10:38You who have become a burden on the people who oppress you
10:40So what about the people you're insulting?
10:43They're filming you when you need something from them that benefits you.
10:46You should know, my dear, that some of the pictures of Paris, as I told you, had a song in them.
10:49And of course, these countries benefited from the slave trade.
10:52But what happened was that the slave victories that came as a result of the revolution imposed a new reality.
10:57And in 1794, my dear France, something truly beautiful was done.
11:01Something the French don't celebrate
11:03And France, my dear, is officially declaring the abolition of slavery in all its colonies.
11:08Goodbye to slavery, and may we cross over to Europe.
11:11We want you in the national team as French people
11:13No, my dear, that was a very, very important decision, another one in European history.
11:16The revolution that took place there, my dear, was truly revolutionary by every measure.
11:19Haiti gained its independence in 1894
11:22To become the first independent Black republic in modern history
11:26The truth, my dear, is that I see my end.
11:28The Hiti revolution and independence became a source of inspiration for all the oppressed people of the world.
11:33The French Revolution, my dear, despite its brutality and violence
11:36But it's a reality that's trying to build a new world.
11:39A world based on freedom, justice, equality, and reason
11:43Even if the road is filled with blood and burning ideas
11:46Of course, my dear, I don't need to tell you that certainly not all the French people agreed with the revolution.
11:49They don't necessarily have to be beneficiaries of the king.
11:51You're old enough to know that life and reading are much more complicated than that.
11:54For example, in the countryside there were religious farmers
11:56Countries that were attached to their traditions
11:58What they saw happening in their religion was terrifying to them.
12:00The revolution is targeting churches, religious institutions, and the calendar.
12:03Even on Sunday, you infidels, we won't go down to pray.
12:05There were also other people who were against the idea of compulsory military service.
12:08Some people thought, "Why should we go and die just because people in Paris executed the king?"
12:12Without even asking our opinion
12:13At that time, many farmers made a picture of a stripped-off image, a counter-image.
12:16And people from the old regime joined them.
12:18The nobles and priests who fled from the oppression, this is their image.
12:20They worked together with a large army, the Catholic and Royalist armies.
12:23There were 30,000 of them, my dear.
12:25They achieved very important victories
12:27The truth, my dear, is that they have taken control of many cities.
12:29But in the end, they gathered in the city of Nann at the home of Captain Mustafa Muhammad.
12:33The world, my dear, has become full of ups and downs.
12:35The issue has turned into a civil war
12:37The situation, my dear, has become utter chaos.
12:39You are fighting from within and fighting from without
12:41And it fights from colonies
12:43The situation has turned into a civil war
12:45From Paris, the Catholic king's peasant army is fighting.
12:47Those who gathered them from afar, you don't understand.
12:49This isn't a joke, this isn't a movie premise
12:51In conclusion, dear revolutionary forces
12:53They are victorious and the peasant army of the Catholic king is growing.
12:55On the north bank of the river
12:57And here this army tried to wage war and request
12:59Aid from Britain, but in the end
13:01They were defeated completely
13:03The truth is, my dear, this won't be the only war or the only rebellion.
13:05The Syrians felt that they were defending the Surah
13:07The rebels saw that you people were calling for freedom
13:11We are calling for our freedom.
13:13Wars begin to break out, and revolutions against revolutions begin to erupt.
13:17It ends with a number of victims reaching
13:19One hundred and seventy thousand people
13:21Approximately one-fifth of the population of these areas
13:23They were killed, and that's not all.
13:25During this same period, one of the Syrian leaders
13:27He did something terrible known as "We are the ones who killed him."
13:29From November 93 to February 94
13:31This Syrian commander was organizing mass drownings.
13:35They say they're charging them for gold from their armies
13:37He was gathering their rebellious enemies and the priests
13:39And he takes them with him to the Loire River.
13:41What's going on? There are boats in a migration.
13:43They will deliver her, my dear ones, to the middle of the river on the day they drown.
13:45He used to call this method, my dear, "brown and national."
13:47The number of victims reached four thousand people.
13:49We'll start seeing pictures that are breaking out
13:51And wars break out in other French cities.
13:53Marseille, Lyon and Toulon
13:55In the rebellion of the city of Lyon, for example
13:57The Republican forces held the Lyon siege for two months.
13:59After they entered it and took control of it
14:01They destroyed parts of the cable.
14:03They executed about two thousand of its inhabitants.
14:05They changed the city's name to the liberated city.
14:07They wrote in the official decree
14:09Lyon fought for freedom, Lyon no longer exists.
14:11The strange thing, my dear, is that a movement calling for freedom
14:13It needs to suppress the freedoms of others.
14:15So, my dear, the matter ends with that
14:17Anyone who seeks freedom is seeking
14:19For his freedom
14:21Freedom from his perspective
14:23The situation in Toulon remained more dangerous.
14:25This is because it is a message to the Prophet.
14:27What did the two kings do? They surrendered the city.
14:29For the English
14:31We want the key to the port. Here you go.
14:33So that if they order fish from inside, you can receive it.
14:35But we're still going to betray each other.
14:37They handed Toulon over to their French rivals
14:39The only one throughout history
14:41They handed over Toulon, finished with a shell
14:43The revolutionary forces had no other option but to
14:45Toulon will besiege Modi's territory.
14:47This siege lasted five whole months, my dear.
14:49Watch the first military appearance
14:51For a young man you know well
14:53And I know it very well, and France knows it very well.
14:55And the world knows him well
14:57No, my dear, of course I'm talking about
14:59Napoleon Brabert
15:01Napoleon Brabert, oh, praise be to God, Napoleon Brabert, my dear
15:03Napoleon at that time knew he would achieve a great victory
15:05He succeeded in building a great reputation for himself.
15:07This is the source of this
15:09The bloody atmosphere witnessed a very famous incident.
15:11A young girl named Charlotte
15:13She decided she would sacrifice herself and stop this cycle of violence.
15:15Seven, if you remember his name
15:17John Paul Maga
15:19The extremist journalist who advocated for the execution of anyone he disliked.
15:21Charlotte held him responsible for all this bloodshed.
15:23She was so happy one day that she took him with her, that he was no longer in his house.
15:25On the pretext that she had obtained lists containing the names of all the enemies of the revolution.
15:29She went in, my dear, and found him sitting in a bathtub because he had a skin disease.
15:33So he would sit in the bathtub for long periods of time.
15:35I gave him the list, my dear.
15:37When he confirmed to her that everyone on this list would be executed
15:39The dagger plunged into his chest and he died, drowning in his own blood.
15:41And this famous painting appeared
15:43The strange thing, my dear, is that Charlotte didn't run away after doing that.
15:53The Gikobians, those extremist people, considered Magah's death to be akin to martyrdom.
15:57This is a martyr, and the painter Jacques-Louis David made a famous painting of him.
16:00The Geckos took advantage of this situation and said that the people in the picture were inside France.
16:05They are cooperating with the enemies outside; all of them want to destroy us.
16:08And in the ruins of 1793, France, my dear, was on the verge of explosion.
16:12War from the outside, illnesses from within, and the people are boiling with anger over the high prices.
16:15Where's the picture, you picture people?
16:17On September 5th, Bertrand Barria, a member of the Public Safety Committee, stood
16:20And he says his famous phrase in parliament
16:22Put terror into the feasibility of business today
16:24It means that today, in your day, put in the feasibility, there is terror
16:26Two hours of naps, two hours of fear
16:27Parliament approves terrorism policy under pressure
16:30The policy says that anyone can be a suspect; we suspected him and had doubts.
16:35This is considered one for the picture
16:36He should be imprisoned and punished immediately.
16:38We're still going to wait for him.
16:39When he rebelled against us
16:41No, it's not comfortable.
16:42Let's get rid of him and relax
16:43This period, my dear, was called the era of terrorism.
16:45From September 1993 to July 1994
16:47Ten months of terror
16:49Syrian courts are no longer courts.
16:51The production line for rulings remained
16:52Execution production line remained
16:53Ready-made quick investigation
16:55After that, either innocence or execution
16:57From today onwards, all Russians are equal
16:59Their bodies won't be alike, but they'll be equal.
17:01Within this year, my dear
17:03I witnessed more than 16,000 executions
17:05Of these, 1600 are in Paris alone.
17:07If we count those who died in prisons
17:09Or in cases other than trials, or those who died without a witness.
17:11That means the number could reach approximately 28,000
17:13Public Safety Committee
17:15Led by Rob Speer and Ma'asa Angust
17:17And the one who was with them before was George Danton
17:19Which is one of the most famous holy surahs
17:21They saw terrorism as a swift and decisive form of justice.
17:23A very harmful form of justice at this stage
17:25What we are going through is for the sake of the republic that we just created.
17:27The guillotine was a new instrument of execution.
17:29Ironically, my dear, strangeness means
17:31The bracelet was considered an instrument of execution.
17:33Human lineage
17:35Why? Because it equals
17:37In the way of death among people
17:39And remember, dear people, back in the day before the revolution, they were
17:41They are executed according to their social class.
17:43It was a calamity, for example, that they were executed by the sword.
17:45He put his head on the thorn, that's it, that's it.
17:47It's what he said about us, they die in the cause
17:49With the wheel of torture by squeezing
17:51It's his luck and his speed in dying, that's what he said.
17:53The guillotine was promising you that you would die.
17:55You and the king are easygoing
17:57The idea of the dear one, the topic preferred to grow until
17:59But the Syrians continued to execute the Syrians.
18:01For example, my dear, it turns out there's a group saying
18:03Why aren't we being executed more often, guys?
18:05We need to execute more
18:07The revolution is taking away people like the revolutionary newspapers.
18:09And what is Maximin Robespierre doing with his group?
18:11Consider the people who want to be executed more
18:13A threat to the revolution that oppresses and executes them
18:15We are revolutionaries, yes, but you are revolutionaries too much.
18:17Okay, Abu Hamad, hand over the two ordinary bulls.
18:19Abba Robespierre, my dear, has passed away.
18:21On George Tanton and a group of
18:23The reliable images
18:25These countries, my dear, neither call for violence nor for the king's glory.
18:27Those who saw the revolution as still in its infancy, now it has succeeded, congratulations.
18:29By God, the men did it! We're so happy and we'll go
18:31These executions must stop.
18:33Robespierre will then execute them as well.
18:35It means, my dear, those who are for the death penalty and those who are against it.
18:37The two Egyptians were spared execution
18:39Whoever can overpower the other will be put to the gallows.
18:41A craft revolution is eating its own children at this time.
18:43The revolution of terror, my dear, will reach its peak.
18:45After a law was issued
18:47On June 10, 1794
18:49My dear, the law has nullified the rights of the accused.
18:51The important thing about hiring a lawyer is that you'll be playing the match without a solid plan.
18:53So, my dear, any minor charge remains.
18:55It leads to immediate execution
18:57From the first act of high treason to breaking the signal
18:59Wait for me at the guillotine
19:01In just 6 weeks, more than 1300 people were executed in Paris.
19:03The truth is that terrorism has consequences.
19:05The process actually appeared, for example
19:07Price Limit Law, also known as the Maximum Limit Law
19:09But a law that fixes bread prices
19:11And Huda, from the dwarf of hunger, a little
19:13Of course, my dear, it's often a game.
19:15In the equation of population density, he succeeded
19:17Everyone is working on getting fuel
19:19The image of this individual worked to reduce
19:21Individuals, so say that, you're a fool.
19:23This is a new economic solution, meaning a new school of economics.
19:25We need to study it in European universities.
19:27Compulsory military service also made France have
19:29A great army, a people's army, was able to regain
19:31Belgium is made up of Austrians
19:33My dear, I don't need to tell you that the price for all of this was terrifying.
19:35Many homes have lost people from their families
19:37The laundry was characterized by the national mousse
19:39The National Razor
19:41Fear has spread to even the members of parliament themselves.
19:43They remained afraid to speak in front of Robs Beer
19:45What were we at the club for?
19:47Robs Beer, who was left with his wealth, is now drowning in blood.
19:49Amarih asked him, "What were we filming about?"
19:51My love, we weren't filming on the angel's side, my love
19:53In Barcelona, we want freedom.
19:55Where is the Universal Declaration of Human Rights?
19:57Paris in June 1894 turned into a ghost town
20:01People whisper some words
20:03We don't know who will be put on the list of those facing executions in the next round.
20:05One step at a time, my dear, with everything that's happening.
20:07With the killing that is happening
20:09With the wars raging abroad
20:11With the state of fear and tension between the representatives and the people
20:13And all this with the agenda that we don't know how to open
20:15We don't even know what day or what month it is.
20:17My dear, the people in Paris were already
20:19They arrived last with Rob Speer
20:21And despite that, my dear Rob Speer
20:23He wasn't corrupt and had no scandals.
20:25He was guided by principles that seemed idealistic.
20:27But these daily executions made it seem as if
20:29A true oxidation of the Angel of Death
20:31Even his closest allies remained afraid of him.
20:33On July 26th, my dear Rob Speer
20:35He's going to make a big mistake.
20:37He will stand in parliament and deliver a cryptic speech.
20:39He will say that there are traitors and conspirators
20:41The council will expose them soon.
20:43The man, my dear, is making a move that's unsettling them.
20:45So that the traitor's fear will show.
20:47Bad Arabic teachers are like that, they don't tell you
20:49I know very well who made that sound.
20:51It's better to do it today than to beat up the whole class.
20:53Because time is short, his friends are fasting and stopping, and so on.
20:55He doesn't know anything, not even a little bit. If he knew, he would have hit him.
20:57What kind of work is this?
20:58The important thing, my dear MP, is that instead of being afraid
20:59And he made it easy for the little ones in the classroom
21:01Everyone took the words as referring to themselves and thought they were the ones being talked about.
21:03This man sees everyone as a traitor and a conspirator.
21:05And here they decided that they would form an alliance against him before their turn came.
21:07And the next day, my dear, July 27th
21:09When Rob Spear was trying to speak
21:11As usual in parliament, the MPs played their game openly.
21:13He prevented them from going up and shouted at them
21:15Down with Rob Spear!
21:17Even the police forces protecting him began to hesitate.
21:19In that it protects him
21:21Here's Rob Spear, in which case Jerry and his friends are quickly involved.
21:23Our municipality is focused on the hope that he will manage to stage a counter-coup.
21:25But Parliament had already taken the lead.
21:27They declared it illegal immediately.
21:29Meaning that it is possible
21:31He is killed without trial.
21:33Even if it were a trial, he wouldn't be able to get a lawyer.
21:35The important thing, my dear, is that the building is surrounded.
21:37In a moment of despair, Rob Spear tries to commit suicide.
21:39But his luck failed in the attempt.
21:41The bullet destroyed part of his jaw, but
21:43Some sources say that there is an officer who shoots him
21:45The important thing is that the soldiers entered
21:47They found him drowned in his blood and his brother injured.
21:49But he knew how to jump over the window.
21:51The National Guard commander is a restaurant in his eye.
21:53Rob Speer's friend, Philip Lobas, succeeded in killing himself.
21:55The second day, my dear, straight away
21:57Petjab Rob Speer and his friends
21:59He executed him without a fair trial.
22:01The scene, my dear, for the second time
22:03It was a very strange and unexpected scene.
22:05People who saw the scene
22:07The execution of the king was completely unexpected.
22:09She sees a scene this strange
22:11Someone too young to see two things
22:13That's how people saw the man
22:15The one who ruled France after the revolution with terror
22:17Standing at the guillotine, waiting his turn
22:19Standing in the same place as before
22:21He destroys the carts that carry the luxuries in his exhibition.
22:23She was standing in front of Rob Speer's house and they vandalized it.
22:25With blood they reached the revolution square
22:27At 6:15 PM, when they untied the rope
22:29Those who were tied to him untied the injured man and asked him
22:31He should say one last word instead of saying anything.
22:33Fadl screamed in pain before the guillotine
22:35Cut off his head completely
22:37With Rob Speer's death, the reign of terror ends.
22:39After the feet of Rob Spear, he will be executed
22:4171 of his supporters the day after
22:43Approximately 104 Rob Spear supporters
22:45Execute him within three days
22:47Their capitals were from the revolutionary government of Paris.
22:49And here France began to recover from the nightmare of terrorism
22:51People started guzzling everything
22:53They are thinking about them after terrorism
22:55The laws are extreme regarding political prisoners.
22:57They were released from the prisons and gallows.
22:59Madame Giotin was named, and the people named
23:01This section on terrorism is from the era of cannibalism.
23:03The people who were with Rob Spear and are saying
23:05Oh God, show us the mischief, they're attacking him now
23:07The truth, my dear, is that things have changed completely in Paris.
23:09During the days of terrorism, people had to dress very simply.
23:11Hassan, you're mistaken if you think you're noble.
23:13Being a little aristocrat will lead you straight to execution
23:15Every mother would perform the ritual ablution for her son before he was born.
23:17It must be collected from the rotten
23:19Rob Spear sees us and executes us.
23:21But after Rob Spear fell, the people were freed.
23:23Parisian women are back to wearing colorful dresses.
23:25And they make beautiful, colorful contacts
23:27There remained a fashion known as the Empire fashion
23:29The shape of people in the streets and the shape of fashion
23:31I changed completely
23:33Also, my dear, the same thing is starting to change.
23:35They were speaking in a pretentious way.
23:37It contains the letter "R" in two parts.
23:39To avoid having to say the word "revolution"
23:41Revolution
23:43Revolution remains
23:45They can't bring the king, it's easy.
23:47Also, my dear, Zahrat has a strange haircut.
23:49Her name is Affectim, meaning affection in the style of the victim.
23:51Young men and women were cutting their hair into boyish styles.
23:53Like who? Like the people who are going to be executed.
23:55And her shaved head, what you're doing, two airs will come down
23:57If there were hair, it could cry out for the guillotine.
23:59There are also people who wear red ribbons around their necks.
24:01It means she's bleeding. Robs Veer's fall wasn't
24:03Just executing a leader, no
24:05That was the end of an entire philosophy, a philosophy that says
24:07Violence can cleanse society.
24:09And he creates a virtuous republic of plunder.
24:11It's already over, but France is finished now.
24:13He entered a highly contradictory phase
24:15Social freedom and economic chaos
24:17Excessive elegance and great hunger
24:19From the outside, they appear cheerful, but from the inside, they know better.
24:21Cheapness in the ruins of the past and great fear of the future
24:23So what will happen?
24:25That's right, my dear, this period
24:27Witnessed social freedom
24:29Concerts, theaters, and a free press
24:31And discussions in salons
24:33But at the same time, there was widespread corruption and bribery.
24:35Until, my dear, there is an uprising in Paris
24:37But this time it wasn't an uprising of the ignorant.
24:39You could call it a royal uprising, my dear.
24:41Approximately 25,000 protesters
24:43They are trying to storm the Tuileries Palace
24:51Bezel bombarded them with cannon fire
24:53And with bullets, he becomes a national hero
24:55At the same time, this is America's relations
24:57In France, things got much worse, even though France
24:59Like I told you before, he was helping America
25:01In its independence from Britain, but America
25:03As usual, in the American movement, they cover up.
25:05It's not usually a specific country, we all do.
25:07America, as usual, didn't go to the beautiful place.
25:09And I preferred the battles in the midst of the war
25:11The area between Britain and France
25:13Not only that, but they also went to sign a trade agreement with Britain.
25:15We're the ones who helped you, imagine that they're against us.
25:17They accuse me of prioritizing interests over reconciliation.
25:19Take it to international policies
25:21And the raids are a blazing fire on the homeland.
25:23And the topic of the fries between you and the building, I took it for myself.
25:25He will be with us in the camp after hundreds of years
25:27Leave it to you, between 1798
25:29And in 1800, a conflict occurred between America and France.
25:31Informal seafood
25:33When they meet in the Caribbean in a war they call
25:35Semi-teacher war
25:37So, my dear, this is the special operation that Putin carried out in Ukraine.
25:39She wouldn't allow a war, especially not one like it.
25:41The situation became very tense when the French Foreign Minister spoke next.
25:43After diplomats blamed the Americans
25:45$250,000 bribe
25:47Ward is worth $10 million
25:49Why? Just so they could agree to negotiate.
25:51My dear, the Americans are very foolish about this move.
25:53Those who are French and their driver are X Y Z
25:55The issue is being discussed in the X Y Z scandal.
25:57France, my dear, just like you messed with America
25:59She decided to take over Britain
26:01And you know, my dear, the historical rule
26:03Great power is being challenged by great power.
26:05What are you going to do? By God Almighty, I won't let you go to Britain.
26:07Are you having a wedding like this?
26:09Suppress my smallness
26:11We see in the year 1798
26:13Napoleon takes Egypt
26:15British interests
26:17I am forgiving of the campaign, at least I discovered the Rosetta Stone.
26:19But why is his secret secret?
26:21Napoleon entered Egypt and triumphed over the kingdoms there.
26:23He settled there to some extent, and the British harbored resentment towards him.
26:25His company is in Fboir and he's a failure, as we all know.
26:27In the era of Akaab
26:29Farah secretly returned to France and Kléber took his place.
26:31And the rest, you know it very well.
26:33The French campaign was indeed a cultural success, and the discoveries were family-related.
26:35His mediation year was a complete failure
26:37But Napoleon revived this campaign
26:39It's a brilliant campaign
26:41He worked on the PR, but nobody in Egypt was with him.
26:43Like your friend who worked in the Gulf and is trying to convince you that the manager
26:45And you know he's a liar, and he knows he's a liar.
26:47Napoleon Al-Azizi, we will bring him brilliance
26:49In parallel, in the year 1799
26:51The government collapsed because of corruption.
26:53And the economy that doesn't want to recover from the previous episode
26:55The royalist parties are starting to regain their footing a bit.
26:57And the winners of the 1997 parliamentary elections
26:59By the year 99
27:01People were fed up with the situation.
27:03My dear, people wanted someone strong.
27:05Some have popularity, some have history.
27:07Does anyone have the ability to take control of a country?
27:09France's shattered uniform
27:11My dear Napoleon, he felt this was his chance
27:13So, my dear, seize the opportunity and return to France.
27:15He staged a swift coup and appointed himself
27:17In the position of First Consul
27:19Regardless of titles, he is the de facto ruler.
27:21For the country here, my dear France, a new era has begun.
27:23Enlightened central government
27:25But without the political posturing
27:27The bull that passed by
27:29The year 1800, my dear
27:31Napoleon was a young man, how many years old?
27:33How old are you, sweetie?
27:35How old are you, Jamil, the one with the achievements?
27:37My dear Napoleon had
27:3930 years
27:41He became Emperor of France
27:43Mahmoud, you've brought him a groom!
27:45No, dear Sana, I'm 31 years old.
27:47In one year he could become Emperor of France
27:49He's probably two years younger than me; he ran a campaign against Egypt.
27:51I will triumph over the Mamluks around the fortress of Acre.
27:53I filmed, my dear, I completed an episode and Hassan
27:55What's next? What's next? History books, huh?
27:57The man was 30, may God bless him.
27:59By God, my dear, we are poor, very poor
28:01Napoleon had decided to rule France firmly under a revolutionary constitutional guise.
28:03Hamel Mix from here to here
28:05For those who want a monarchy, we'll bring them an emperor.
28:07And for those who want freedom, we'll bring them one.
28:09It's not a king talking about freedom.
28:11Everything is settled and gone
28:13In 1802, Napoleon consolidated his power.
28:15By a carefully orchestrated popular referendum
28:17A popular referendum will make him ruler for life in France.
28:19Something like that, old rent
28:21He will remain in his original property, an old rent-controlled building.
28:23Napoleon succeeded in imposing order and ending chaos.
28:25Using what? His weapon
28:27The one who was in every street in France
28:29Napoleon reassured the peasants about the land.
28:31Those who bought it during the revolution and established fields
28:33The bourgeoisie, who are the middle class and merchants
28:35Reassure them about their investments
28:37In 1801 he went to reconcile with the Catholic Church
28:39And he made an agreement with Baba
28:41Rome itself, in order to return to Christianity
28:43In France it is practiced freely
28:45This is because it's different, but the church still exists.
28:47Under state control, he attempted to create a Sifzahiri situation.
28:49At an equal distance from everyone
28:51And also in 1804, Napoleon
28:53A new civil law is being issued
28:55A law called Napoleon's Law
28:57The system regulates contracts and property rights.
28:59It brings closer equality between male citizens
29:01Before the law
29:03But the law was socially conservative.
29:05This means, for example, restoring the father's perpetual authority over the family.
29:07And the women were a little bit into their rights.
29:09Those who took it were amateur revolutionaries
29:11For example, divorce is very difficult for women.
29:13But it's very easy for a man
29:15And the propaganda he's doing about his military failures
29:17And France's influence in Europe will expand
29:19After his victory over Austria in 1800
29:21The entirety of Europe has decided that it will be forced to expel them.
29:23And a peace agreement is being made with him
29:25The year 1802, for the first time, my dear
29:27Peace has been achieved for years
29:29Let me tell you, suddenly this was a false peace
29:31From 1804
29:33My dear Napoleon, he's starting to get sick.
29:35Grandiosity is a step of the esteemed
29:37He continued to see himself as more than just a revolutionary leader.
29:39He saw himself as a descendant of the conquering conquerors.
29:41And he returned to playfully caress the old dream.
29:43Which ruler of ancient times?
29:45Ruling the world was Alexander the Great's dream
29:47He remained more inclined to live like a king.
29:49In December 1804 he declared himself
29:51Emperor of France
29:53In a famous coronation ceremony held in a cathedral
29:55Notre Dame and instead of Napoleon
29:57He's waiting for the Pope to come and put the crown on his head.
29:59As was tradition, Napoleon went and snatched the crown.
30:01He wore it for himself
30:03He says that his authority comes from him.
30:05This authority comes from the people, it comes from France.
30:07It didn't come from the church or from God.
30:09And Napoleon is installing himself as emperor
30:11He began to drift further and further from his principles
30:13The French language that calls for equality
30:15And freedom was indeed a preservation of legal equality.
30:17But let me tell you that I put political freedoms
30:19And the journalist in France
30:21Externally, Napoleon's ambition remained limitless.
30:23He wants to make France bigger
30:25He is trying to belittle England and is preparing a naval fleet.
30:27But it washes away a huge loss
30:29He decides that he will change his plan.
30:31He is trying to defeat England's allies in Europe.
30:33To force England to surrender
30:35And that's what happened in the same year when he achieved a huge victory.
30:37On Austria and Russia
30:39After this victory, Napoleon dismantled the empire.
30:41Holy Roman
30:43The very old empire that included
30:45Parts of Germany, Austria and Italy
30:47Napoleon also created a new union which we called
30:49The Rhyme Union is a union under the authority of the Evangelist.
30:51He appointed his sisters and relatives
30:53Kings of the European countries, which is the solution
30:55All of Europe has become a mess.
30:57The EU office remained at the table
30:59At lunchtime, in particular, Napoleon created
31:01A huge empire controlled by the Menbart family
31:03This, my dear, is a conspiracy; this was a state.
31:05It has internal fissures
31:07And torture and torture and people
31:09By imagining it, people are rebels who are rebelling.
31:11On rebels and wars
31:13From every corner and every angle
31:15Suddenly the man's head explodes and Europe falls asleep
31:17From Morocco, a weak country takes
31:19Divided and being fought from all sides
31:21He seizes it and occupies it
31:23Not all of them, my dear, were Napoleon, unfortunately.
31:25He went too far in his obedience and got involved in wars
31:27Long, like, for example, the Spanish Civil War
31:29When he entered Russia in 1812
31:31I received a military certificate from the army.
31:33And Napoleon lost almost everything because of it
31:35Half a million soldiers due to cold and hunger
31:37He withdrew from Russia completely.
31:39Europe here looked at the situation and felt
31:41The slaughtered animal is thrashing about; the man is coming out of
31:43Russia, Bey Takt, Bido'a, Tab'a, Shurba
31:45This is an excellent time to swear against him
31:47And we will eliminate it in 2013
31:49Napoleon is drowning in the Battle of Nations
31:51The battle that took place near the German city of Leipzig
31:53My dear, it was a decisive battle.
31:55The armies of Russia and Austria were gathered there
31:57Sweden and Prussia were all countries opposed to Napoleon.
31:59Indian Cup Match John Cena vs. The Nexus
32:01And after Napoleon's expected determination
32:03The Allied forces are succeeding in that
32:05France fears the year 1814
32:07And Napoleon makes him bigger if he
32:09He abdicates and dies
32:11A small island called Qalba, a small island
32:13Europe, Italy, then the European kings
32:15They met at the Vienna conference to say what
32:17This evening has exhausted us and our families.
32:19And empires emerged.
32:21And the occupations suffocated us
32:23We're fed up, we want kings
32:25The nobles brought us back, the nobles put us in the freezer
32:27We want slavery, and by God, we haven't seen any good since we abolished it.
32:29We want the old system
32:31A little bit of tyranny is shaping France
32:33Our people are writing about our weariness from wars
32:35Everyone wants to go back to pre-revolution Europe.
32:37Welcome to the sixty-year-old Nile, that's all, my dear.
32:39Napoleon, as you know, in the final chapter
32:41He went back to France again
32:43He returned to France in 1815
32:45And he succeeded, my dear, in regaining his rule.
32:47Seriously, Abu Ahmed
32:49Oh my dear, really, but the apology didn't last and they weren't dead for a day.
32:51The Semester entered the Empire
32:53The body returned to the benefit
32:55Napoleon lost during this short period in his famous battle at Waterloo
32:57The battle that completely ended his rule
32:59Al-Maradhi is an island in the Atlantic Ocean.
33:01Saint Helena is far away, and the rest, my dear, is there.
33:03Someone died in 1821
33:05My most important question, dear friend
33:07He was supposed to ask me, but honestly I'm too lazy to imitate you.
33:09I'm tired of wondering what Napoleon's palace is in Benbaret.
33:11On the revolution itself? Meanwhile, my dear Napoleon represents
33:13It's a very strange situation, in terms of
33:15Ideas of revolution, such as legal equality, arose
33:17He also abolished the feudal slavery system.
33:19In a European phase, like Germany and Poland
33:21Italy, on the other side, transformed
33:23From a revolutionary leader who called for freedom and equality
33:25For someone seeking power and personal gain
33:27Even if it's at the expense of France itself.
33:29At that time, my dear Napoleon was creating a state of confusion.
33:31You don't know if this revolution has succeeded.
33:33Honestly, this revolution failed, but that's what we know.
33:35It's certain that what Napoleon did wasn't pleasing
33:37This decision was made by the Allies after they defeated Napoleon.
33:39They decide to go back
33:41The old royal family
33:43The Bourbon dynasty, the ruling family before what
33:45What will the revolution bring? Let's start looking for it.
33:47We are in Louis XVI the Perfect
33:49He was tortured during the seventeenth revolution, but they can't find him.
33:51Hold on, my eighteen-year-old son!
33:53Of course, Louis XVIII discovered that French society
33:55It changed because of the revolution and it's no good.
33:57He easily returns to the old ways of governance
33:59The peasants now own the lands of the nobles.
34:01They emerged with a renewed, economically strong version.
34:03This edition has a political voice, and here is the owner.
34:05If he agrees to the constitutional charter
34:07The one who will turn France into a constitutional monarchy
34:09There is no complete return to the old absolute monarchy.
34:11But the king kept it or it was returned to him
34:13Many powers, and this, my dear
34:15Nobody in the world is completely gone, there are no pictures anymore
34:17And royalists as well
34:19There were people in Boniperti who were the same as Boniperti
34:21The situation in France was deficient.
34:23A division lives on, my dear Louis XVIII
34:25He'll die soon, and someone else will come after him.
34:27His brother, King Charles X
34:29This guy will try to turn back time a little
34:31He paid large sums to the nobles
34:33And increased the Church's influence
34:35He returned to the issue of press freedom.
34:37And try, my dear, to dissolve the parliament
34:39Then Paris erupts in a massive popular revolution.
34:41They call it the Glorious Three-Day Revolution
34:43Students and workers marched, raising the flag of the revolution.
34:45Charles X, my dear, take it easy.
34:47He looked at his titles and decided to run away
34:49He decided to flee, and the parliament will choose
34:51Louis Philippe, Duke of Orléans
34:53There's no one in this country to rule us.
34:55And this, my dear, is the title of King Citizen
34:57And this, my dear, is after some political events
34:59He too is fleeing to England.
35:01Then, my dear, the second republic will be declared immediately.
35:03This revolution wasn't limited to France.
35:05It didn't stop here; it inspired all of Europe.
35:07In a wave of revolutions known as
35:09Spring of the people
35:11Austria, Germany, Italy
35:13The entire Polish population saw what was happening in France.
35:15Everyone saw what happened to the French people.
35:17Bahna said, "We can do that too."
35:19This, my dear, is telling us
35:21The French Revolution, despite the bloodshed and conflicts
35:23Psychological harm and physical harm
35:25What hurt the people was that her ideas didn't die.
35:27Even if the revolution fails, it will work.
35:29Stable democracy in the monarchies of Europe
35:31It's impossible for her to come back again
35:33Among the gains of the French Revolution, my dear
35:35The Universal Declaration of Human Rights has become a global reference point.
35:37And it affected the global declaration
35:39The one who works in 1948
35:41The French Revolution also influenced modern citizenship.
35:43The word nationalism appeared
35:45The idea of belonging to borders emerged
35:47The citizen's loyalty remains with the state.
35:49Not for the king
35:51Europe, my dear, will enter after this era.
35:53Towards a new era, the era of middle printing
35:55The bourgeois nature is deceitful.
35:57Philosophers, thinkers, and political scientists ask themselves
35:59Was it so that we could reach this point?
36:01We need this whole blood
36:03This is complete murder
36:05The truth, my dear, is that there is a disagreement.
36:07People tell you that yes, this can happen if there is focus.
36:09On economic policies
36:11They say it actually happened in a country like England.
36:13Some people say no, of course that couldn't have happened
36:15England fell short in what happened to France.
36:17They saw and learned from them
36:19Bessie is the destiny of any revolution that aspires to perfection.
36:21Violence can sometimes be swallowed up
36:23And something other than what she started for comes out of her heart
36:25As they said in Robesfer's time
36:27The revolution is killing its own children.
36:29There is no single lesson you can extract from the French Revolution
36:31Because you, in order to extract the lesson
36:33You need to choose where you'll finish it.
36:35Will it end with the existence of the Robosphere? Will it end?
36:37Will it end with Napoleon's return? Or with the king's return?
36:39Will it end in France today? Definitely.
36:41We can't necessarily attribute everything.
36:43We can attribute any change to the French Revolution.
36:45Whether we like it or not, the French Revolution
36:47But we can simply and with a very clear conscience
36:49We attribute indirect changes to it.
36:51There are so many of them in the world, and we can confirm that
36:53It is a very important revolution
36:55Not just in the history of France or the history of Europe
36:57But in world history, and of course, my dear, you're all the same.
36:59History is far too complex for us to know.
37:01We judge it based on our current context.
37:03We're like a tennis umpire sitting high up in the third row.
37:05He kept looking around and people kept looking at each other underneath.
37:07So, my dear, we judge and consider
37:09And also, most importantly, we understand the historical context.
37:11For all these events
37:13That's it, my dear, we're not friends, let's look at the previous cases.
37:15See the upcoming cases. We'll look at the sources we have on YouTube. Subscribe to the channel.
37:17Mohammad, honestly, I'll give you a big shout-out for the episode.
37:19I was having a great time, and please excuse me if I
37:21My contributions were few in this episode.
37:23If you notice, honestly, I've wanted to be like this for a long time.
37:25One of the kings of Europe, but a bit more creative with the numbers.
37:27I don't want my dear twenty-sixth
37:29Or the thirty-fifth dear one
37:31I am content being my dear one
37:33Rida, thank God, no, my dear, talk immediately.
37:35You'll be in trouble if someone asks you for a couple of pennies the next day
37:37You'll go and share, my dear, this is from the name and I'll divide you into the window symbol.