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فسيلة - transplant
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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
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:00Zika Doctor
00:08No, no, just like you
00:10I just wanted to know what you're working on these days.
00:12Everything is fine, thank God.
00:13During this period, I'm working on something that will revolutionize the world of agriculture.
00:16So why do we do that?
00:17The number of people has increased, so we are obligated to meet their needs.
00:20God willing, after I finish working on my ship.
00:22We will be able to plant and harvest vegetables more than once a year.
00:25And we will have enough people
00:27Our problem is that the population has increased.
00:29It's not that we lack food
00:30I'm sorry, I don't quite understand you.
00:32What's the other one, doctor?
00:33Find us a way to stop people from increasing in size like this.
00:36I'm taking birth control pills, that means
00:37The backward one, doctor
00:38Open up a little in front
00:39It already exists, but they don't use it.
00:41What did you do?
00:42We need to work on reducing the population.
00:44We want people to die
00:45Hey, who said we're going to kill people?
00:47I just want you to think about something
00:49They abandoned her and were deprived of having children.
00:50Sika
00:51For the sake of this, we die.
00:52People are working on it.
00:53Feel the words of the seeker
00:54And you're wearing black, all black.
00:56He's definitely an evil person
00:57The doctor is thinking about it.
00:58The budget we need
00:59To confirm to all these people
01:01More than the budget we need
01:03To reduce their numbers
01:04What's the benefit and what's the difference?
01:06We are real estate brokers
01:07So what's the problem?
01:08Either we increase the budget
01:09It looks like you don't want to bring it up.
01:10In short, the people who are being funded
01:12And they will bring you this balto
01:13We don't want you to think about how
01:15Eat plenty of vegetables
01:16And increase the authority
01:17What money? What's the point?
01:19Nobody will buy me
01:21This is the Balto, brothers
01:22I have resigned
01:23Hey, where are you going, Doc?
01:24You're the one who eats what you enter.
01:25He started to take him out
01:26And then, weren't I just telling you?
01:27We need to transfer the number
01:29So, you and your wife should see what you can do.
01:30and children
01:31How many vegetables will you provide us with?
01:34You're being squeezed, by the way
01:36And she threatens quickly before she understands.
01:38I just feel that what I'm doing
01:39He can make us all suffer in the whole world, Gazan.
01:42Do you know the onion that's this big?
01:44With her, she'll be this good
01:46Yes, it will probably be that long.
01:49But do you know how big the carrot will be?
01:51It will be this big
01:53Even more than that
01:55But I put the two carrots on top of each other, it will be this big.
01:58By God, what a face!
01:59It prevents people from having children.
02:07Dear viewers, prayers and blessings be upon you. I know you are in a new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
02:10My dear, let me take you back to 1936
02:13This year, California is witnessing one of the strangest cases in American history.
02:18Anne Cooper Hewitt, a young woman in her twenties, is admitted to the hospital for an appendectomy.
02:22But she gets a completely different one.
02:25Thank God the appendix was removed.
02:26But the doctors didn't just remove her appendix.
02:29The uterus has a part called the fallopian tubes.
02:31The flops are tubes
02:32Harsa Deh Buhamad was referring to the Flop channels.
02:35By investigating the channels of Flop, this is what happened.
02:37That means Andy will never have children again.
02:39This six left her hospitalized while she had appendicitis.
02:41She came out of it, literally sterilized.
02:43Again, my dear, you will file a compensation claim worth half a million dollars.
02:46Not just at the hospital, but also at her mother's.
02:49Marianne Cooper
02:49Because the mother was the one who directly asked the surgeons
02:52If they sterilize its clause
02:53Zay Bu Hamad, not Azzi Al Walad
02:55The boy was born
02:55And don't be ashamed as she has a bastard because she doesn't have a big baby
02:58The mother did that because she alone expressed her feelings for her daughter, Rahbiya.
03:01The only way for the family to maintain its unity and wealth
03:03This lineage stands completely still
03:05Oh, this is a bribe like Buhamad's crime.
03:06Not only does she have to be compensated for her money, she also has to be imprisoned
03:09He was telling you, my dear, and then suddenly revealing that Anne's case was already resolved.
03:12for him?
03:13Because the prosecution failed to convince the judge that what happened was against the law.
03:17for him?
03:17Because at the time she had the operation, she was a minor.
03:20Her mother had the right to make such a decision.
03:22Because, my dear, let me surprise you and tell you that compulsory sterilization was not illegal in the state of California.
03:28It means it wasn't just the mother who could do that, her daughter too.
03:30The government, according to the laws of the time, had the right to disinfect anyone.
03:33If she felt that this person was ill or not useful to society
03:37Or even Zay, who described himself as sufficiently trustworthy
03:40All of this, my dear, was under the guise of improving people.
03:42This scary idea was being defended
03:44And even justifying it
03:45It was said that the practice of eugenics was something that had been done for thousands of years.
03:49A well-established human practice
03:50On the contrary, this is the law of nature, this is the law of the universe
03:53The weak disappear, and only the strongest survive.
03:57Improving the breeding process allows humans to practice their work on other organisms.
04:00They knew it, my dear, it's been around for over 10,000 years.
04:02When we learned activities like farming or rest
04:05We used to do that
04:05If a person at this time could find a visitor
04:07Dark-skinned women look prettier and older
04:10He would have kept it for next season
04:12And he replaces it with the second forged one.
04:13The one that doesn't produce the same output
04:15So, artificial selection takes place here.
04:16If another human hadn't raised Jake or my dog, he would have had strong qualities.
04:20He is keen to marry him to any young lady who has a wife in front of him.
04:22So that a stronger generation emerges
04:24And take the good qualities that we want to increase.
04:26Selecting a nature with it
04:27This, my dear, will be known as selective breading
04:30For example, the Romans would have dogs like the Moles.
04:33These dogs, my dear, are very big and strong.
04:35These dogs appeared because the Romans were able to develop the breeds.
04:38And help the wartime
04:39If we look, for example, at the ancient Egyptian civilization
04:41You'll find it's a variant, for example, of strains like the Fairhorn.
04:43The breed is very suitable for China
04:45That was Tek back then
04:46We work with breeds that help us
04:48We will do the things we want.
04:49Each according to their abilities and development needs.
04:52As I said, my dear
04:53These examples are all examples of artificial selection.
04:56Industrial selection
04:57I'm telling you all
04:57From the year 1859
04:59The famous book *On the Origin of Species* will appear
05:01The Origin of Species
05:02For the scientist Charles Darwin
05:03Heads
05:05Heeds, heedsha, is that what I see?
05:07The subtitle of this book was
05:09By Means of Natural Selection
05:11Darwin's separation of species will give us a similar term
05:13But I'll just change one word.
05:15Darwin will introduce a new term for artificial selection.
05:18It is natural selection
05:19Natural Selection
05:20According to Darwin
05:21Natural selection and the process of improving breeds
05:23It's not something a person does intentionally.
05:25This is actually the way nature works
05:27And all of it
05:28Simply put, if your genes don't make you suited to this nature
05:32These genes of yours are disappearing
05:34Your genes enable you to hunt, eat, drink, and then die.
05:40You will continue
05:41This is the method of election
05:42And this process, my dear, doesn't happen to serve humanity.
05:44Nor the animal
05:45It's something that exists like this
05:46She tests carelessly
05:49The cat can live in this environment
05:50And I can't
05:50We, my dear, don't call it natural selection.
05:53We call them circumstances
05:53If Kehen lived
05:54hatred of a blessing
05:55I couldn't, Yango
05:56Why would we need him again?
05:57The same formatting system, my friend.
05:58So he said, my dear, if you
05:59It's about hundreds of giraffes living in a rainforest
06:03There have been people there for thousands of years.
06:04Rainforest
06:06It has grasses in the ground
06:07Short trees and tall trees
06:08And the giraffes with us are a mistake
06:10There are those with long necks
06:10And the one with a short neck
06:11Over time
06:12Climate changes have occurred
06:14dryness
06:14And the forest is not full of God's choices like before.
06:17So, my dear Aziz, the difficult circumstances
06:19Who would expect that the plants would be Yangu?
06:20Is it grass or tall, large trees?
06:23Often large, tall trees
06:25Because he has a forger underground
06:27So you can take a lot of water
06:29Deep forged
06:30And fix it in the soil
06:31Most likely, the larger trees will be the ones that survive.
06:33Now let's move to the other side.
06:34giraffes
06:35We will find the cameras that were monitored by a car
06:38There's no more grass on the ground.
06:39Because there was drought and there was heavy rain
06:42His death
06:43He won't be able to live and continue
06:44Except for those who can reach the tall trees
06:46Here, the short giraffe was condemned to death.
06:48And the tall giraffe that has the genes
06:50The one that makes it long
06:52He is the one whose genes will remain and continue.
06:53Carrie stayed for this scene
06:54Several generations and the same spirit of a giraffe herd
06:57You'll find the giraffe in front of you, watching for a long time.
06:59It may complete, pass on its genes, and reproduce.
07:01Here, my dear
07:02Nature chose its ultimate death
07:03The people who are supposed to continue
07:05The type that was able to withstand environmental changes
07:07And this, my dear, is the essence of the idea of natural selection.
07:09As you know, my dear
07:10Natural selection, like many scientific ideas
07:13You will leave the realm of applied natural science.
07:15And it enters the field of social sciences
07:17I love her, but I feel like I have a problem.
07:19In understanding the meaning you are aiming at
07:21Mustafa Lutfi al-Manfaluti is watching it, my brothers.
07:23Let me explain this transfer process to you, my dear.
07:26Remember this wisdom: for every action, there is a reaction.
07:28Equal to it in magnitude
07:30And pressed in that direction
07:31Which we talked about in the Isaac Newton episode
07:33The truth is, my dear, this is not wisdom.
07:35This is Newton's third law in classical mechanics.
07:37This is a scientific law that is studied and has 85 questions.
07:40In the book of the exam
07:41This law, my dear, describes the movement of masses.
07:43The relationship between the magnitude of the force and the direction of the motion
07:46This is the law, my dear Motch the Physicist
07:47But at the same time, your aunt is going against this law.
07:50When you talk to her about the phone
07:51About the infidelity between her daughter and her fiancée
07:53Al-Wadi said something to her that wasn't what she meant.
07:54I replied to him with the word, not the one that was
07:55For every action, there is a reaction.
07:57He opposed him in every direction and every need
07:58But at your aunt's, it doesn't have to be the same amount.
08:00Al-Wadi said a word, my love.
08:01And only three senses out of five
08:03The same thing happened, my dear, with natural selection.
08:05The idea of natural selection
08:06I went out into the forest once
08:07And I want to impose my ideas on humanity.
08:09With the aim of improving human races
08:12It's not natural selection
08:13It's working normally anyway.
08:15Why don't we speed up the manufacturing process?
08:16And the person among us can't drink it.
08:19The length of the tall tree
08:20It's not worth it for our community.
08:21The idea of improving human races
08:23The world will wish for it, Francis Galton
08:26This is my dear friend, a relative of Darwin.
08:27My dear, this will focus on a characteristic
08:29Amnesia
08:29The Nabataeans
08:31What's wrong, my dear?
08:33No, it's just that, Muhammad, I felt this was an important quality to emphasize.
08:36Mohammed, you reminded me of the system I put
08:37any?
08:38She left
08:38Yes
08:38pure
08:39I can't find it, I swear.
08:40I was in the west of Umm Muhammad from Jahmel and Hay
08:42I don't know what made me so incredibly stupid
08:43I'm looking for her prophet, but I can't find him in his book.
08:45Hirota Taraginius
08:46Francis will gather historical evidence to confirm that noble families possess this characteristic.
08:51You can preserve it across different generations.
08:53If they had separated from each other and not mixed their lineage with other lineages
08:56So here, my dear family, is what we need.
08:58Francis, my dear, will gather historical evidence.
09:00These are proofs that confirm that the noble one is wise.
09:03Therefore, when Nabil surpasses Nabil
09:05He will be a wise man, he will overstep his bounds, he will give you what happened, he will hit them.
09:08Squared
09:09The meaning, or rather the meaning, of noble families is when they surpass each other.
09:12She maintains her intelligence
09:13You will have a noble and intelligent child.
09:15But Muhammad, I feel this is not scientific.
09:17So I might be from a common father and mother, not from noble families.
09:20He turned away from himself, exerted himself, and remained vigilant.
09:22This, my dear, is called habituation.
09:23Galtem will respond to you at that time, of course, not necessarily in a scientific way.
09:27He will tell you that nature and heredity are stronger than nurture.
09:31He is a big fan of the idea, my dear.
09:32The occasion, my dear, is what will make you say the famous phrase of
09:34Litcher Versus Nertzer
09:35This is what your aunt says, by the way. Why does the dog age and keep coming back?
09:38He will begin outlining future research steps to study synchronicity.
09:41And in it we will be able to remotely separate two timers
09:43We place each one in their own environment so they can learn different things.
09:46Then we measure and see the difference
09:47In my opinion, Galton
09:48We will find that their nature and their inherited traits
09:51The things that were already in them
09:52She's the one who will win and get a glimpse of the outside world.
09:54Both will turn out the same, regardless of their different environments.
09:56Galton felt that he was undermining the idea of natural selection.
09:59Step forward
10:00We all know that there's a niche and selection
10:02We know that there are some bad gardens.
10:05Our acid is with us
10:06Why don't we get rid of these paradises early on?
10:08Why don't we take the clean, sweet, beautiful paradises?
10:10Let's make them eligible for marriage and raise generations of people better than the previous generations.
10:14Fawaa, Fawaa, Fawaa, Fawaa
10:17And the good qualities are passed down through generations.
10:19And bad traits are also passed down through generations.
10:22Take care of the womb, that's me
10:23Why should we wait?
10:25Either nature takes its course and natural selection
10:27And this year she will change her opinion
10:29Well, we should marry the handsome one who is handsome.
10:31We'll look good so that society becomes full of sweets.
10:33That's the same idea as baking.
10:35The one about sofas and chickens
10:36Galton wants to do it to humans.
10:37In 1883
10:39He will publish his book in which he will present this idea.
10:41And he'll give her a new term with value.
10:43The term, my dear, will be eugenics.
10:46A word whose meaning in ancient rhyming language
10:47Good origin
10:48Francis Galton believed that the government should support this issue.
10:51And the old families entered and intermarried with each other
10:53Ali and Hussein, the sons of Al-Janani, don't look at Angie, they stay at home.
10:56Not the word "dear" is a Galton worker
10:57The daughters of those wealthy families used to marry late.
11:00They have fewer children.
11:01In contrast to the poor and middle classes
11:03They have many children to help them with the feeling that brings them a larger income.
11:07Here, the Frenchman Galton wanted a world with all the good qualities and all the good genes.
11:12Everyone remains a song, strong and intelligent.
11:13Quickly, Abu Hamad, if you cough twice, I feel that the idea isn't bad, but it has a slight flaw, as you might say.
11:18When the offspring are broken, they remain confined to the noble classes only.
11:20But what will the non-noble classes do?
11:22They compensated for the mockery of the game, part four.
11:24They kissed each other's heads and we finished the Tabaniyya
11:26What will the middle and lower classes do in this world?
11:28Your question, my dear, requires an answer that will change everything.
11:30And Francis Galton's scientific dream turned into a social nightmare.
11:35In the 1870s, the idea of social Darwinism emerged.
11:39Social Druidism
11:40These, my dear, are not scientific attempts to study reading.
11:42Or to reach a stronger scientific lineage, as Galton dreamed.
11:46He used science to improve people.
11:48Rather, a need like social psychology is a social theory that will be led by thinkers and philosophers.
11:53And she will continue to use the ideas of natural selection.
11:55But the natural instead of what is natural
11:57We'll take it from the void and then add the descending societies.
11:59We paint them like this
12:00As you know, my dear
12:01Nature has laws
12:03And since man is part of nature
12:04God's command means
12:05He is subject to the same laws.
12:06He was one of the most famous proponents of this theory
12:09One named Herbert Svenser
12:10This, my dear philosopher, is the one who will say the famous sentence.
12:13Survival of the fittest
12:15survival of the fittest
12:16Not for the strongest
12:17It's normal for the weak one to be the one who infects the genitals.
12:19The best
12:19He will say that, my dear, in response to a question.
12:21What will we do with the weak?
12:22He saw, my dear
12:23Community assistance for the marginalized and vulnerable
12:27Patients can defy the laws of nature.
12:29Society doesn't have to help them.
12:30Because these countries, folks, are not the best for life.
12:32But one of them has a disease and a headache
12:34I am treating him
12:35for him?
12:35What dies
12:36What is invalid, O shortcoming?
12:37Isn't that how we can be?
12:38We're saving future generations a lot of trouble.
12:41I'm not doing this because I'm racist.
12:43Or is it because I'm from a certain class?
12:44no
12:45I'm thinking about future generations of humanity.
12:47Helping the weak
12:48It will delay the natural development of societies.
12:51I know, my dear, that's what you should ask yourself.
12:52This is the photographer of the ecstatic geography
12:53The gazelle is protected from the lion.
12:55on the contrary
12:55When the lion sees Kali the gazelle
12:57A day without a camera
12:58To get another gazelle
13:00From a different angle
13:00The answer remains here
13:01These are natural laws
13:02weak gazelle
13:03She can't run from the lion
13:04The lion is like it
13:05This is normal
13:06Natural
13:07We're not going to rescue the gazelle.
13:08This is ecological balance
13:09The one who reached you is human, by the way.
13:11If we take this planet
13:12According to this theory
13:13The song won't help him because of poverty.
13:14Doctors
13:15It's not helpful for patients to help him.
13:17Except with them or a return
13:18Because this
13:18Eco-balance
13:20My dear Siddhartha
13:21She is nicknamed Al-Nadheef
13:23We, guys
13:24Wino Sign
13:24We know our science
13:25Now we can implement it.
13:26It's possible, as we know
13:27Physicist's Perspectives
13:28Differential and integral calculus
13:29And we apply it in engineering
13:30Let's start applying environmentalism now.
13:31What we know
13:32From Nature Selection
13:33maybe
13:33Of course, my dear
13:3419th-century societies
13:35She'll tell you
13:35tttttttt
13:36The idea is brilliant.
13:37What kind of talk are we hearing about the environment?
13:39Before what makes us
13:40We are all plagued
13:41Kwesinh makes the focus
13:42And that's it
13:43And they live in need of it to end
13:44Nice idea
13:45Dear community
13:46He will be very ready for this idea.
13:47Let us explain why
13:48In the 19th century
13:49With the emergence of the industrial revolution
13:50In Europe and in America
13:51Society will be divided in a very specific way
13:53Two editions
13:53Rich people
13:54Factory owners
13:55Bourgeois
13:56and focus
13:56They work as proletarian laborers
13:58Why are these workers
13:59They are asking for better wages
14:00Humane working conditions
14:01here
14:01Social necessity will emerge
14:03Excellent response
14:04The song tells you
14:05This is sweet.
14:05The folds of the quiver
14:06Always justifying the situation
14:07The one who is walking now
14:08He, my friends, is a world of his own.
14:10We didn't choose
14:11We exist above societies
14:13As a natural result
14:14For the superiority of our people, by God
14:16apricot
14:16not my choice
14:17It's not a time to be attracted to
14:19He has money with him.
14:20Not me
14:20It's all here, here, and here
14:22And in my mother's and father's genes
14:23Abu
14:24I didn't choose anything at all
14:25You are the weakest ones
14:26By God, this
14:27unfortunate
14:27In it
14:28Our natural place
14:29This is your natural place
14:31And if we help you
14:32What will we be?
14:33The Pandora of Humanity
14:34The pando of humanity will bring you
14:35You don't read Francis Galton
14:36Or what?
14:37Do not be naked, be naked
14:38Naked
14:38The topic is serious
14:39Okay, everyone go back to your land.
14:40Also, my dear, during the same period
14:42Europe will experience its most glorious era of colonialism.
14:45You also have it here
14:46Strong European people
14:47They have technically good weapons.
14:49We're going to primitive people
14:51They don't have an advanced civilization.
14:53In the same European style
14:54The one that was in Europe
14:55So you meet
14:55Empires of Z
14:56Britain and France
14:57Justifying its occupation
14:58countries in Asia
14:59In Africa
15:00Social Darwinism
15:01Considering that these are peoples, folks
15:02Less developed than Europeans
15:04If it were up to us
15:05We didn't do anything
15:06But that's a responsibility.
15:07To save humanity, I swear to God
15:09We are passionate about traveling.
15:10And we run that
15:11We played outside, we wanted
15:12Word loses
15:13Not really cool
15:14By God, this is our responsibility.
15:15This is our cold weather, folks.
15:16For humanity
15:17By God, guys
15:18Your resources are heavy
15:19Backbreaking
15:20And we're putting up with it and staying silent.
15:21And we go and take these resources
15:23We put it into your industries
15:24And we'll try to be the same again.
15:25You guys aren't making this a fun topic after this, I swear.
15:27By God, the head is worn out and used
15:28Those who come after me are losing
15:29God
15:30Dear idea
15:31This was happening
15:31At the same time that we are discovering
15:33There is a need called
15:34Genetics
15:35genes
15:35Russian materials
15:37Akshili
15:37It is being transferred
15:38We're all talking about who we are.
15:40Theoretically, there is a need to connect generations.
15:42Security, we now have the idea of the "sheenat"
15:44We still have laboratories located in America.
15:46Davenboard Laboratory Uniforms from New York
15:48What Charles Davenport did in 1904
15:51And whoever tries in a more scientific way
15:52Generally speaking, Jude Dalton completes
15:54This man, my dear
15:54He was collecting information about American families.
15:57Their origin and lineage
15:58Detailed records of family history
16:00And also the genetic diseases they have
16:02This guy believed the government would benefit from the information. Davenport
16:05He will present this information to the government.
16:06He will ask them to let him work on the sermon.
16:08It'll be a joke, my dear.
16:09People know each other
16:10He suggested to the government that the Min family marry into the Min family.
16:12So that the integration of the two families produces the family best suited to society.
16:16And you should also know this date
16:17Who doesn't marry whom?
16:19And who doesn't get married at all?
16:20Because its characteristics are from 1060 Nila, these cannot be transferred to the limit.
16:22It means a stingy Tibetan who interferes in other people's problems.
16:24He supports West Ham United
16:26We don't need NATO at all.
16:27Yes, my dear
16:28The US government wasn't very keen on this engagement issue.
16:30Who will marry whom, and who will have children with whom?
16:32What mattered to him was who would eradicate poverty and disease.
16:35Oh, how wonderful, Abu Hami!
16:35And I buried her, oh my division
16:36Poverty and disease are terrible things.
16:38And the truth, O Sabet, does not justify them.
16:39My dear, I love you, my dear.
16:41No, dear
16:41There is a difference between getting rid of poverty and disease.
16:45And getting rid of the poor and the sick
16:48Shall we say it again? Shall we say it again?
16:50There is a difference between getting rid of poverty and disease.
16:53And getting rid of the poor and the sick
16:56What can I tell you, my dear?
16:57The doctor named Haley Sharp in 1907
16:59He worked in Indiana State Corrections and Prisons
17:02The fairy's ideas remain in his workplace at the prison.
17:04Since we don't want the poor and sick to be excluded
17:07With their poor and sick gardens
17:09Because they are mentally unfit, as we agreed
17:11Why don't we buy a group of prisoners?
17:12They proved that they were mentally unfit
17:15And they were according to Harry
17:16Responding to crimes
17:17It confirms that some people are not fit to continue.
17:20Can I tell you, my dear?
17:21Harry will start acting on his own.
17:22He will sterilize prisoners outside the framework of the law.
17:25It will make them unable to succeed
17:27He suggested that politics should emerge from the prisons once and for all.
17:29It applies to the patients and the patients
17:31Mohammed, the short man
17:32This man is a disciple
17:33This needs to be sterilized
17:34What's up, my dear? You've become a strong Eugene.
17:36Scary, my dear?
17:37The good news is that Harry won't be sterilized.
17:39On the contrary
17:40This will receive very high government support.
17:43Indiana Governor Heidi has a like
17:45The governor will be one of the biggest supporters of the Eugenie project.
17:48Here, dear Indiana, will be the first American state
17:51The mandatory sterilization law is applied.
17:53What we see is unqualified
17:55Whatever our standard is?
17:56He has no right to be a successor
17:58Your friend
17:59There are people there, my dear, who can get an eye, let them.
18:01Lucky is the view and the background
18:02Hurry up before they catch you!
18:04By narrowing this law, there is now a right
18:06With doctors in prisons and mental health screenings
18:09They sterilize prisoners and patients without the person's consent.
18:12Not even his family
18:13Sterilization products, my dear, will start to spread.
18:15It will be implemented in Indiana and applied in 30 other states.
18:19So you can see how much respectable and arrogant Trump is
18:22Mohammed, I noticed something
18:23You exploited life for dramatic construction
18:25If you pass by the story at the beginning
18:27The story of Ancober that you talked about at the beginning
18:29The one who was a minor
18:29The sterilization process works on it
18:31The one who was prostrating
18:32Not confined to a sanatorium
18:33She wasn't even poor
18:34Her blood was shed, and she was the provider for many families.
18:35She told them she was stupid
18:36You want to get up
18:37If we are in a state of ignorance, we will also be punished.
18:39I'm scared.
18:40By God, me too, my dear
18:41Because, my dear
18:42Not just 90% of the show's viewers will disappear
18:44100% of the program's servers will disappear
18:46Let me tell you, my dear
18:47Sterilization laws will be expanded
18:49And people will start to become more and more attached over time.
18:51Until you reach it, you will consider
18:52The person who, if he was a little
18:54This is the owner of dangerous gardens
18:55Topic, my dear
18:56The prisoner's shameful act proves that he committed a heinous act.
18:58Those in mental hospitals at least have a medical report.
19:01Even if it's not justified
19:02He says he has mental problems
19:04What exactly do we define as a forest?
19:06We will make him a "revival of the truth"
19:07No, my dear, they will calculate it based on the zakat measurement.
19:09Here, my dear, the Zakat test will appear.
19:11On IQ 9
19:121905
19:13We'll see two flags
19:14Alfred Benio and Theodore Simon
19:15They design the children's test
19:17Those who face difficulties at school
19:19So we can see which one of them
19:21My toys and which of them need special attention
19:23The test was different.
19:25Such as focus, alertness, and memory
19:27If you watched the episode "The Follies of the Idiots"
19:29You'll discover that Bennickel knows he's presenting a dangerous but necessary idea.
19:32Especially with the flourishing of education
19:34Europe's need for student classification
19:36That's why he'll emphasize that his test can't be a method
19:38To permanently classify humans
19:40Also, determine their social value
19:42Because intelligence and benefit to any individual will be brought to society.
19:44Very paved needs
19:46It is controlled by the environment and society itself.
19:48For example, someone like Messi's office should be given an IQ test.
19:50If you fail, you'll kill him, then you'll hide him.
19:52If the world can't handle it, I won't either.
19:54Messi is dear to the Pope
19:56We just put this on the card, Jundud.
19:58Therefore, here is the intelligence
20:00It's not something tangible that we can express.
20:02Despite all this
20:03The IQ test will be the standard.
20:05They consider the warnings of this structure
20:07Cancelled from the curriculum
20:08We will not accept this.
20:09A weak hadith
20:10The structural test, my dear, will reach America.
20:11Specifically, Stanford University
20:13So that the world could design it, Nois Termin
20:15Stanford Bent Skelly
20:16And that America will use to design its recruits
20:18In the First World War
20:19Be according to his intelligence
20:20Those with higher intelligence scores
20:22It will be distributed across areas with planning and technology.
20:25Those with lower scores on the intelligence test
20:27He will distribute it among the handicrafts.
20:29By the end of the war, there were 1.7 million conscripts.
20:32They were given intelligence tests
20:33For the first time, my dear, you are taking an intelligence test.
20:35On the wide knife like this
20:37What's wrong with me? I feel like you're insulting the Americans.
20:40Which job these days requires IQ tests?
20:42After that, the census will be conducted to determine the arrival of outstanding students.
20:44And we fail and we go in, he says it's normal fifth grade
20:46Oven elements layered in the subject
20:48Afterwards, my dear, you will see that this test
20:50He was inherently biased
20:52Biased from the beginning in favor of a particular class, culture, and race
20:54For example, there are questions about the names of household products.
20:57These products are familiar to someone living in a comfortable, civilized environment.
21:01But it doesn't necessarily have to be unfamiliar to someone from the countryside.
21:04If I told you I get my fruit from Jarmiq
21:06You'll be extravagant and ask why I'm playing
21:14There are also difficult math questions.
21:16For people who did not necessarily have the same level of education
21:19Does the fact that a person is uneducated mean that he is weak-minded and unintelligent?
21:22Didn't you notice some schools, for example, in neighborhoods with large Black populations?
21:25It was not adequately funded
21:28Even good students wouldn't be able to secure that much funding.
21:30He won't be able to let the student do activities from which she can learn more
21:33Therefore, it will affect educational currencies.
21:35Therefore, in the intelligence tests that were at least initially released
21:38They didn't appear as a caesarea
21:40Of course, we cannot deny that some tests can reveal the level of intelligence in some people.
21:44Definitely, but it doesn't just show that way.
21:46She also condemns their ethnicity, which may have been influenced by it.
21:49At the level of education, which is related to finance and the poor neighborhoods
21:52And the taxes that these neighborhoods pay
21:54It might be related to the social class that can afford the products.
21:58Which, as we said, is present in some tests
22:00These tests will easily show the vast difference between white Americans and African Americans.
22:04Here, my dear, this test is a differentiating tool.
22:06Discrimination, even if it is unfair.
22:08But I value a number that can express intelligence
22:11Now, if you pass the IQ test, you can get the job.
22:13If you don't come back, you won't work normally.
22:15But my dear, if you hadn't passed the IQ test then...
22:18You could have lost people to me
22:19enough
22:20Because there are still people, my dear, who get distracted over time, who tell me
22:23Oh, those were the days!
22:24Yes
22:25That used to happen back in the day.
22:26Two stupid shots
22:27On a shot of lack of focus
22:28You find yourself No Kids
22:30You find yourself, dear Lord Knight
22:34Here we find the period from the beginning of the twenty villages up to the seventies
22:37You gave my dear the name of improving people
22:39It contains sixty thousand people
22:41They were legally sterilized in thirty US states
22:45We're back again, my dear. We're a Nazi German hospital.
22:47We are in the United States of America
22:48The citadel of democracy, my dear
22:50It's important, my dear, to control his eyes; he's poor, sick, or stupid.
22:53This is in addition, of course, to the minorities and the marginalized.
22:55In Televornia alone, she ruled against Ancober.
22:57My dear, you've sterilized about twenty thousand people.
22:59Ahmed, I feel what's happening is inhumane.
23:01I'm certain that what's happening is inhumane.
23:03This outfit is inhumane
23:04Like, my dear, from history, like I remember the number of victims
23:08I remember the people who stood against this law
23:10They considered it racial discrimination and rejected it.
23:12People like Carrie Pat who was born in the year 6
23:15In Virginia, from a very poor family
23:17Her mother will be placed in a mental institution when she is classified as mentally deficient.
23:20Carrie is sent to a foster family.
23:22In her sixteenth year, Carrie will be raped by a member of this family and will become pregnant by him.
23:26And here, my dear, the family will decide that they don't want to bear responsibility for what happened to them.
23:30And the responsibility for the inheritance is the same as hers, and they will take her to a mental health facility if she is mentally weak like her mother.
23:34Medical authorities in Virginia readily labeled Carrie as mentally ill.
23:39A victim of rape is not happy if she is someone whose sexual behavior is deviant, just like her mother.
23:43The flaw in it is merely a characteristic feature.
23:45We need to catch up with Kari and sterilize her so that those desirable qualities don't go away.
23:50Also, my dear, Carrie's data was included in the tests of the people who told you about her.
23:54And which, just as it was preserving the data of distinguished families
23:57So she also saved data on deteriorating families.
24:00They call them, my dear, the Digital Families
24:02Carrie and her mother were among them
24:04Carrie, my dear, has decided that she will stand against this injustice.
24:06A lawsuit was filed in the state of Virginia, and on Saturday 1927, it was decided that it was challenging the mandatory sterilization order.
24:12Mahmi was saying that this law, folks, is unconstitutional.
24:15Because he is violating his client's rights to freedom and physical dignity.
24:19But the researchers decided that sterilization was a way for people to improve the genetic makeup of the community.
24:25And the Supreme Court, my dear, almost unanimously supported this.
24:28She stood in favor of Virginia's mandatory sterilization law.
24:31And here, my dear judge, he uttered a historic phrase to the ruling elite at that time.
24:36Three generations of idiots are enough
24:38Three generations of idiots are enough
24:39Three generations of idiots are enough
24:41Three Rushd Abu Ahmad
24:42Trump is a blessing.
24:43Trump is the world's biggest joke, this is Hiba Rashid, the one from Marsal.
24:46After this ruling, my dear, Carrie will be forcibly sterilized.
24:49Yes, as I told you, my dear
24:50Sixty thousand people are legally entitled to American citizenship.
24:54Mohammad, based on my understanding of your storytelling style and dramatic structure
24:58You presented a pivotal character caricature
25:00You will stand against this law and, God willing, you will stop it.
25:02Frankly, from the perspective of the United States of America
25:04And the media of the United States of America
25:06American policy
25:07I feel there are still fools out there
25:09It seems that the sterilization policy is over.
25:12I see them
25:13So who is it?
25:14The one who knows is the one who defies the law from the beginning.
25:15The truth, my dear, is that the moment the laws of the jungle were applied to our society
25:20Ideas like "survival of the fittest" don't apply to a civilized society.
25:23A human condition that sees at least one society
25:25The extreme is trying to reach a scary, terrifying forest.
25:28Just so they can learn and master the lesson
25:29A society that takes eugenics from mere ideas in a laboratory
25:32Or imagine the world or disputed laws in a court
25:35And it transforms it into a lifestyle
25:36Welcome, my dear, to the Nazi Germany Endgame
25:39Suddenly the Americans said to you, "Oh, Black River!"
25:41This is what we are doing. If there is a little of us in it, we will reach these countries
25:45When the eugenics movement in America began to spread during the 1920s, it coalesced into ideas such as compulsory sterilization.
25:50The issue will begin to affect German scientists, thinkers, and politicians.
25:55And this line of thinking, my dear, will reach the one with the big head and small mustache.
25:59Adolf Wittler, who wrote the famous book Mein Kampf
26:01The best cider that is specified is never
26:03Hitler would begin his intense admiration for Eugenia and the compulsory sterilization in America.
26:08This is the idea of this sister good
26:10We create a sieve that filters people, so only the good ones come out.
26:13They make me the elite of society
26:15The elite marry within the elite.
26:17The elite remain behind, but we still have elites.
26:19We then added more water and filtered it until we had veal sweat.
26:24Upon his rise to power in 1933
26:26He would transform eugenics into a fundamental part of Nazi state policy.
26:29Hitler, my dear, will issue a law to prevent the spread of the Virgin Mary.
26:33Directly inspired by American galaxies
26:35In America, they call it eugenics.
26:37arrogance
26:38Let me tell you, my dear, if we had sterilized 60,000 people in America
26:41In Nazi Germany under Hitler's rule, 400,000 people were sterilized.
26:45400,000?
26:46What's this, Bahmad? This is an unjustified promise.
26:47My dear, the matter doesn't end there.
26:48The issue isn't over yet.
26:49Hitler will now realize that this issue is pointless.
26:51And I'm still going to sterilize what I don't like.
26:53I'm waiting for him to die so we can get rid of people like him.
26:55Why don't we just kill him right away? He's not doing any good deeds on Earth.
26:57And what we destroy are people for him
26:58Nabid is a personal person
26:59Because, my dear, it's poisonous 1939
27:01Hitler begins a campaign of euthanasia
27:03The one immediately
27:04My dear, a collective humanity that brings together the sick and the disabled
27:07They're all in one place so you can get rid of them.
27:09Hitler presented this, my dear, not just as an economic solution.
27:12It relieves the state of the burden of supporting these people.
27:15Because they are unproductive and useless
27:17While he presents them as a humanitarian solution, he fears the suffering of people in their lives.
27:20Donate to the "End Your Life, End Your Suffering" campaign.
27:23Sean, my dear, do you know how euthanasia used to be done?
27:26That's how Bu Hamad is, in a merciful way, as his name suggests.
27:28Come on, honey, euthanasia was merciless, release her.
27:30Hitler starved patients to death.
27:32And sometimes they would inject them with the mark
27:34Over time, methods of killing pests became more sophisticated, using carbon monoxide.
27:38The gas will be a seed and a source for the famous gas rooms
27:42Hitler's Fram
27:43According to some sources, the number of victims of the euthanasia program will reach
27:46For 200,000 people
27:47So you have 400,000 sanitizers with you
27:49And 200,000 were mercilessly liquidated under the guise of euthanasia.
27:53This is how we put ourselves in society
27:55A new society, a new German society remained.
27:57Now we'll see the Germans, good and simple.
27:59Yes, that's German goodness!
28:01We are no longer burdened with the problems of sick and tired Germans.
28:11While the Americans believed in improving serials
28:13Hitler was determined to achieve complete racial purity.
28:16Purity in Hitler's dictionary
28:18It means the continuation of the race
28:20The blond reader
28:21This is Hitler's most entrenched ideology.
28:23Not all Germans are like that.
28:24They always have Hitler himself with black hair
28:26His eyes are brown
28:27Hitler would not only issue laws like the Nuremberg Laws
28:30Which prevents Aryans from marrying any impure race
28:33No matter how strong, intelligent, and productive these races may be
28:36But these different races will transform
28:38For purposes required by the state
28:40Emma, we should imprison them in a specific place.
28:42Like the ghettos the Nazis made
28:44Just like they did to the Jews in Poland
28:46Or even that they are killing different races
28:48Through mobile death squads
28:50The one who will hunt down the Gypsies, the Jews, and the Communists
28:52And they kill them in the occupied Soviet territories.
28:54Okay, uncle, I don't want to marry someone of the same sex.
28:56Just let us live, please.
28:58Where are the good old days of sterilization?
29:00Finally, by January 1942
29:02After the Fancy conference in Berlin
29:04Labor and extermination camps will be established
29:06We won't let you die alone.
29:08We'll work with you, put you in a group, and you'll stay together.
29:10You won't die alone, you won't perish alone
29:12Thank God, you're both strong, Abu Ahmed.
29:14The extermination camps will kill approximately
29:16Six million Jews and half a million Roma
29:18And two thousand disabled
29:20They wanted to bring these people in and use them as markers.
29:22After killing them, they take them to mass graves.
29:24Or crematoria
29:26Hitler told you, America, you're only hoping for sterilization.
29:28Here, my dear Hitler, is where the idea of eugenics comes from.
29:30A completely different place
29:32At the end of World War II
29:34Trials of Nazi leaders will begin.
29:36Because they include doctors and scientists
29:38Who judged them?
29:40The allies, by the grace of God, by the name of God, by the will of God
29:42The Nazis' ideas came from them.
29:44It was just the Nazis who built upon this argument.
29:46These ideas are fundamentally flawed, my friend.
29:48As I explained to her, it was a sortie from the Allied countries.
29:50Francis Galton was an English man
29:52These sterilization laws first appeared in America.
29:54Although the new German constitution
29:56He will overturn all of Hitler's infamous laws.
29:58Forced sterilization laws in America
30:00It won't end right after the war.
30:02It will take time until it's cancelled
30:04Let me surprise you, my friend, and tell you that some American states
30:06American
30:08From the allies who were holding scientists accountable
30:10"The Nazis are monsters," Eugenia says.
30:12Some US states still had it
30:14Continuous sterilization regulations limit swimming pools
30:16Last, my dear, an American state
30:18What year was Oregon?
30:201980
30:22From 41 years ago
30:24Finally, some states are acknowledging the damage they have caused.
30:26And offer formal apologies
30:28States like North Carolina paid compensation
30:30For the victims who were sterilized
30:32And so, my dear, the eugenics era has ended.
30:34Classic
30:36The topic is still ongoing; it includes classical eugenics.
30:38Eugenia diuretic
30:40My dear, I'm telling you it's not over yet.
30:42Reports emerged in June 2020
30:44German journalist Adrian Zenz says the Chinese government has used forced sterilization on thousands of Uyghur women in Xinjiang.
30:52We also saw this happen in some Eastern European countries, especially in Slovakia.
30:56Something was born when cases of forced sterilization of women from the Roma or Gypsy community were documented in the post-war period, years before the sterilizations.
31:04In America itself, reports emerged in 2013 stating that some American prisons
31:08The forced sterilization of some women in American prisons, especially in California, is a common practice, as if they were minorities.
31:14The paragraph was published until the waiting period ended in 2014.
31:16But my dear world, for centuries you have been trying Darwin's and Galton's theories for frightening applications on Earth.
31:22Western governments have spent years enacting racist laws to promise people a happy and just world.
31:26We can create stronger generations within it.
31:28If we take a snapshot of the current moment and look at it now, we'll find that science has now developed a simple test available to everyone.
31:34Without much time or difficulty, it is the amniocentesis test.
31:38Can you, my dear, take a simple sample of the amniotic fluid to definitively determine whether the fetus will have chromosomal or other problems?
31:47Or even, for example, he has diseases like cystic fibrositis or even diseases like cystic fibrositis
31:51Some parents see this test as crucial in determining whether or not to keep the fetus.
31:55This test, my dear, is available everywhere, and like all the stations in our story, we can consider it a key to a wider horizon.
32:00Or more specifically, what is known as selective eugenics, which here offers us promises that are completely different from classical eugenics.
32:08Promises that, God willing, we will solve all the problems of heredity and lineage before the children even come into the world.
32:14This, my dear, is known in the tech world as Fertility Tech, and Musk is blamed for the idea that he's doing things that give... I mean, there's nothing, my dear, that he's leaving out.
32:21He didn't stamp it, God willing, correctly in every part of the screen.
32:24With the new selective eugenics brand, we can choose the traits that the offspring will inherit before birth.
32:31And this, my dear, happens in two ways: firstly, we examine this offspring before birth; we do genetic testing.
32:36Here, dear parents, they sit like on Arab's Got Talent and choose the embryo that they currently have their eye on.
32:42The revelation is like diseases and messages, of course we don't want that, my dear. He says it's in the context of the flower, but this is action-oriented, perhaps with something very useful.
32:47This means it's possible to invest in it and it could become something valuable and beneficial to everyone who uses it.
32:51That's the only challenge, because of course we want to protect humanity from diseases, but we don't just want the song. They were the ones who were able to protect their children from diseases, and other people couldn't.
32:59We'll all stay well, living together and enjoying the privileges, God willing.
33:03Another method, my friend, relies on modification. We'll roll up our sleeves, download a test, see what the genes are saying, and modify it using Actris Bar Cas Nine technology. We solve all the problems, see where the data is, and adjust it.
33:14This trick, my dear, was solved so that our friends, our faith, and our drinkers could win the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
33:19The idea, my dear, is simply that Control Z F Cas Nine is a protein that can cut DA. So scientists use the RA they want to modify, and it searches for it and cuts its DA.
33:28In the area where the cut occurred, scientists can repair it, remove the problematic gene, and then perform a cut and insertion.
33:35This, my dear, is the evolution of humanity from human to Word file. Now we can edit you, modify you, and attach files to you everywhere.
33:41This technology has become capable of correcting genetic defects, eliminating hereditary diseases, and improving the health of the fetus before birth.
33:48Not only that, it is also possible for parents to choose the qualities they want, such as intelligence, strength, and external vision.
33:54They point to the gene that's driving the youth of Egypt crazy and causing them to lose their minds in the matter of mating—the gene for baldness, the hereditary gene that burned them.
33:59By God, our dear friend, this view is behind Hajjaj Abdel Azim.
34:02Okay, Ruba Hamad is a fool for bringing up women in this forbidden topic, but I saw the issue as very serious.
34:05This way we don't need to carry out the costly extermination process or the sterilization process, which is pointless.
34:09We can thus solve the problem of the source or the origin.
34:11My dear friend, life teaches you that optimism in the lab is completely different from the result in reality.
34:15I've been to you, my dear, in Oppenheimer's episode on scientists.
34:18By registering the lab, they're creating cool, awesome technology that could change the world.
34:22But my dear, always remember that there are politicians, people with influence and power, and people who want to profit.
34:28This is always a joke
34:29It is true that scientists can see the smallest things under a microscope and can see the farthest things with a telescope.
34:33But it's impossible, my dear, for them to have the technology to see the future.
34:36Applying science in practice is not always guaranteed.
34:39And those who control it, my dear, are not always scientists with such good intentions.
34:42But on the contrary, they could be foundational, they could be businessmen
34:45And necessarily, their interests will not be the same as all of ours.
34:47Here, my dear, frightening problems will arise.
34:49Genetic modification, for example, may have unpredictable side effects.
34:52However, this technology is very expensive, therefore the access to this technology will be in a single layer.
34:57You need it to test for one fetus; in some labs, the price can reach ten thousand dollars.
35:02To uncover the two jinn, you would need, for example, four jinn to choose from.
35:05Villa Shakaa Baqa
35:06That is, at a rate of forty thousand dollars
35:08Time will turn out fine and good, thank God.
35:10But he'll live through a period of promiscuity and freedom, visiting his father in prison.
35:13Because Baba was one of the rivals
35:14This, of course, my dear, is in addition to a major problem we see in the crops.
35:17When you have people who all want to have a Hollywood smile, with straight hair, blonde hair, and certain eye shapes, you create almost identical copies of humanity.
35:28It doesn't create genetic diversity
35:30That's how it is, my dear, you might get a virus that wipes you out, leaders
35:32You know, my dear, that some societies, for example in Africa, have immunity against AIDS.
35:37Some communities have immunity to cystic fibrosus.
35:40The differences that exist in our societies are very important genetically for the evolution of humanity.
35:45If societies suddenly said, "No, we want one race with specific genes and characteristics,"
35:49We'll start to become close to each other, and it will become easier to wipe us out with a disease or virus.
35:54And I thanked you, honestly, you tired me and my mother out.
35:56What's the solution? Should we cancel science in the lab, cancel real-world application, or cancel you personally?
36:01The story of Eugenia, my dear, has a problem: it's not a story of feeling, but it's not a story of gloom all the time.
36:06Rather, my dear, it is a story of scientific progress and legitimate ambition.
36:09We want to end human suffering.
36:11We want to reduce the number of diseases and the harm that is happening to humans.
36:14We want to improve our existence, our lives, and the lives of our children.
36:17All of this happened to humans from the very beginning of animal domestication to improve their breed.
36:21Until the blind tried to find something like a mirror
36:23And better generations appear in plants and animals
36:25Every chapter in our story began with the smart water.
36:28Over time it turned into a deadly weapon
36:30Like an intelligence test that emerged to organize a beautiful idea
36:32This is the education available to millions of children
36:34He himself was the tool for sorting and classifying millions of victims.
36:38At a time when eugenics was an ambition for many scientists
36:40They want to create a perfect human generation capable of overcoming diseases and defects.
36:44No one could have imagined that the peak of eugenics would be a holocaust for millions of people.
36:47As I said, my dear, the goal is noble.
36:49The pursuit of this goal is noble.
36:51But we must be careful when implementing it.
36:53In conclusion, my dear, any thought on paper
36:55In scientific terms, it appears noble, and it is noble.
36:57We have to drag it like that
36:58Scientists need to work
36:59Our children need to grow up to be scientists so they can develop and improve this.
37:02Please do this
37:03My dear, my ring space, don't tell me
37:05No, shut down the business.
37:06We want to think
37:07Don't continue with this
37:08But also, the other people who will emerge around the scientists will continue with this.
37:11Be careful, the problem is with the app.
37:13Because ultimately, the rules are supposed to save humanity.
37:15Don't let them ultimately become rules for killing humans.
37:18That's all, my dear
37:19Good or bad, we'll see what happened in the last episode in the next one.
37:21We'll look for sources we want to see and subscribe to the channel.
37:23Seriously, Abu Ahmed, thank you, my dear, for the great episode.
37:25Excellent performance and a really great script, very nice indeed.
37:28After my dear episode, I won't sit down to use the countries, I won't sit down to use the countries
37:31The danger is that we will be exposed and I will not be aware of it.
37:33Bravo, my dear! You understood the episode very well.
37:35Please keep doing this.
37:36Normally, dear, we close it with a mouthful, but enough with the sanitizing in the episode.
37:39I always used to say, during this period or something like that, we