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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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00:00His soldiers, his soldiers, his soldiers
00:02What does nationality mean?
00:03Yeah, Billy
00:04Your assistant is still too young for this biology lesson.
00:07Let me explain
00:08When a man and a woman love each other very much
00:11They get up
00:12Oh, my grandfather, a black man
00:13I'm not blackening your name by talking about her
00:15Yes
00:15I believe you, and she'll explain something completely different to you.
00:18Look, Billy
00:19There's something very important you need to know about humans.
00:21Is he stupid?
00:22Correct
00:23But the thing that makes it worse
00:25greed
00:25correct
00:26But humans too
00:28Is he selfish?
00:30So what now?
00:31Aren't we going to leave out the entire paragraph of his grandfather's segment?
00:32Shouldn't we go looking for another undocumented source?
00:34like?
00:36No, Grandma
00:37Where else can I find an unreliable source like yours?
00:39Yes, go ahead, my dear.
00:40Human nature, Billy
00:43racist
00:45What does racist mean?
00:46He means he's being very serious with his words.
00:48God, you are so long, my soul
00:51racist
00:52It means looking at the element
00:55The essence is not considered
00:56And this has to do with nationalities
00:58This is something
00:59It was done by humans so they could bully their fellow human beings.
01:02To prevent him from entering his land
01:04On the grounds that he is an uncivilized immigrant
01:07Exactly
01:07Just like Europe does
01:09And why do I want to go to Europe?
01:10They have neither morals nor principles.
01:12As they claim
01:13God bless the Prophet
01:14What kind of awareness is this, Oula?
01:16This is the curse that will befall the children of the new generation.
01:18By its type, early, early
01:19And some things break
01:21Are you not arming yourself again?
01:22Are you breaking down, Joaco?
01:23No, Grandpa, it's normal in the salon.
01:24We're just kids now, reckless and all that.
01:26Kamel, what were you saying?
01:28Look, Billy, my son
01:31I want to advise you
01:32You always
01:34Always
01:40I'm supposed to say something wise now, I'm envious.
01:42but
01:42I feel the same way too.
01:44I honestly don't know
01:45Take your time, grandpa
01:48I'm telling you, you don't have a suggestion for wisdom that I need, and you're capable of it.
01:51I don't know
01:52I'm still new to this whole grandfather and grandson thing.
01:56I have no experience
01:57Leave too
02:01Do you know that your mom and dad are getting a divorce because they don't love you?
02:05Oh Mama
02:07This will benefit you in your character development in the future.
02:11You'll sit with one and attract her attention.
02:13Because she will be convinced that she wants to fix you
02:15So it becomes connected to her
02:24Dear viewers
02:25Peace and blessings of God be upon you
02:25Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program
02:28This episode, my dear, is a sex episode.
02:30What? Abu Ahmed, are you saying this?
02:31My dear, he meant that she was talking about her nationality.
02:33Oh Abu Ahmed, you actually believe in his blackboards like that, man?
02:36In 1977, Peterd said, "Iranian Mehran Karimi Nasiri from his country Iran..."
02:41He is stripped of his citizenship.
02:43Mehran prefers to travel through many countries.
02:45Until 1981
02:48After four years, he obtains asylum papers for Belgium.
02:51Oh Abu Ahmed, a happy story that ended happily and very quickly
02:55The happy ending only exists in movies and in Real Madrid matches.
02:58flexible?
02:59Mehran's papers and beginnings during his travels
03:01He is being held as a legal procedure at Charleroi Airport in France.
03:04So that, my dear, the man's honor remains present at the French airport.
03:07Without any nationality or identity papers
03:09There's nothing to prove who he is, where he came from, or who his mother is.
03:13He has no papers stating his name, nationality, or even origin.
03:15Mehran will cling to this story, which he is the source of.
03:18He will keep repeating it every time the authorities ask about his situation.
03:21Ahmed, I feel you're trying to gain sympathy for nothing.
03:23What does it mean to detain a man in transit for a week, two weeks, a month, sir?
03:27What he likes is not accepting the topic
03:28And with Abu Ahmed's iron, he sits at Charles de Gaulle Airport in France.
03:30Not the umbrella station
03:32My dear, Mehran won't be at the airport for a day or two, or even a month.
03:36Her name is Dee, if you watch the Dabke program you'll know her
03:38He will stay for 18 consecutive years
03:41As for what you mentioned?
03:4218 consecutive years
03:43He didn't even go out to the airport to greet his relatives?
03:46no
03:46This guy, my dear, spent the eighties and nineties at the airport
03:49This man knew nothing about Hamid Al-Shaari
03:51For 18 consecutive years, she was sitting on a bench at the airport.
03:53He's collecting Bauchers so he can eat at the airport restaurant.
03:56Until his presence at the airport became very normal.
03:58You'll find Link One, Link Two, where the lead check is.
04:01Uncle Mehran
04:02It became part of the airport
04:03pilots and airport staff
04:04They still know him as one of the local icons
04:06Until the year ninety-nine
04:07When the French will issue him papers
04:09He can live there in France
04:11A costume from which he gets
04:11The truth, my dear, and the surprise
04:13Mehran will refuse to take this paper
04:23He will ultimately cling to his presence at the airport, which has become his new home.
04:27Mehran Deh's story will be featured in the film The Terminal
04:29Spielberg's famous
04:30And at the same time that Tom Hanks manages to get out of the airport
04:33Catherine Zeta-Jones is accompanied by
04:35Hekshli, my dear, this story might be even sadder than that.
04:37Because the real Mehran will die inside the airport
04:39He will die in the place where he lived most of his life.
04:42Do you know, my dear, what year he died? He died in November 2022.
04:45A man was born in Qur'an and died at the airport in the month of Djoul
04:48He lived most of his life at an airport
04:49He died in the arrivals hall without an identity and without a nationality
04:52Perhaps it's normal to be sleepy every morning
04:54As an Egyptian, Lebanese, or Kuwaiti person
04:58That was perfectly normal
05:00But let's leave aside your statement that citizenship did not begin as an acquired right for people.
05:04Rather, it was a privilege that required effort and hard work to obtain.
05:08Many people lived lives similar to Mehran's.
05:10They have no identity in the eyes of the world.
05:12Citizenship began in the first Cap Privilege
05:14A privilege reserved only for the elite, as stated in his book.
05:16Citizenship
05:18Richard Blamy says
05:19If we look at the concept of nationality in ancient Greece
05:21Who will we find him embracing?
05:22The property owners are men
05:24If you don't own anything and you're single
05:26Or you have a need, but you're a woman
05:28Thank you, we're not with you.
05:29Not only that
05:29You must remain affiliated with families of noble lineage, generation after generation.
05:32It means Baba is from Asina, very tired
05:33Dad didn't help
05:35It must remain Asina, generation after generation.
05:36This definition puts pressure on, my dear, who from outside?
05:38The answer is easy
05:39Paragraph, slaves, women, immigrants
05:41And any limit is enjoyable
05:43Who is this, my dear?
05:44minority
05:44Countries that are called citizens
05:46Harry tells you that Roma will also use the same concept.
05:48In the same way
05:49To differentiate their elite
05:51About the inhabitants of the regions that Rome defeated
05:53And I placed it under the wing of the empire
05:55We are all under the Roman Empire
05:57But not everyone who claims to speak for the Prophet can call himself a citizen.
05:59Don't take it personally, Abu Ahmed.
06:01Don't take it personally, Abu Ahmed.
06:01Don't take it personally, Abu Ahmed.
06:02Mahnash, Abu Ahmed, back in the day there was no bidet, and now there's no bidet.
06:04You're talking about things from ancient times.
06:06We are now in a new dream
06:07And a dreamer from among people who are all citizens and happy
06:09Honestly, are you happy?
06:10It might be nice, but I'm a citizen.
06:12But actually, Abu Ahmed, we're a beer in a developed world.
06:14All meaning nationalities, all meaning internet
06:16There are no more titles, slaves, or anything like that.
06:18The idea of ​​nationality, my dear, we can say
06:19The idea of ​​discussing the concept of nationality and citizenship
06:22Which is distributed to most of the population
06:24This is a relatively recent understanding in human history.
06:26It will start appearing on Channel 18 with the French and American revolutions.
06:30A voice appears calling out that every citizen has the right to take the nationality of their country.
06:33Until the dreamlike replacement of human rights is issued
06:36Which is Ironic, that in 1948
06:37The remaining half of Article Fifteen states that every bakery has the right
06:41He enjoys the nationality of money
06:43Citizens may not be arbitrarily deprived of their nationality.
06:45Why, Abu Ahmed? That was a long time ago.
06:47That was in the past, now it's a distorted, advanced era.
06:48Back in the day, there was no Rib Roll Shish on Strips
06:51Now you can have rip roll shish on strips
06:53It can be a regular dish or a spicy one.
06:54Back then, we didn't have nationalities.
06:56Now I'm all of us with nationalities
06:57Hey, you're talking about old problems.
06:59Let's make it a surprise, Aziz.
07:00According to my statement, the first United
07:012022
07:02The world contains four and four-tenths
07:05one million people
07:06Didn't they have citizenship and lose it?
07:07no
07:08Countries that have no nationality at all
07:09They are called
07:11Expect, my dear, that this number is greater than many books
07:14Because these are documented cases
07:15These are documented cases of people who have no drivers.
07:18Before you, there are those who are not documented and who have no documents.
07:20No, how can Hamid follow you?
07:22Someone is born in the country and doesn't get its citizenship
07:23It's not born
07:24You go get vaccinated at the health center
07:25Don't take this birthday, you'll grow up
07:26What's this birthday you're celebrating?
07:28And it remains a national ID number
07:28This national ID number is not supposed to be a nationality.
07:30So, there's more to it, my dear.
07:31There are many reasons for this.
07:32Some countries, like Barbados for example
07:34If the mother is unknown, she cannot pass on the nationality certificate.
07:37In countries like Yugoslavia, for example
07:39When it broke apart into smaller states: Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina
07:42Minorities like the Romabib emerged
07:44The people of those countries suffered for a long time.
07:45So that any of these new countries can include them
07:48And so, over time, they became
07:49Stateless
07:50Why, my dear, do you not have citizenship?
07:52You have no right to education, nor to care, nor even
07:55Look, this woman is just like everyone else.
07:58You might think that citizenship is an established system
08:00To ensure equality for all
08:02Because we all have glory, nine of our country
08:04This was the view of many scholars
08:05For example, a sociologist
08:07Whoever saw that we finally brought it
08:09First thing we had was citizenship
08:11So we have finally managed to eliminate the differences between social classes.
08:14From the minister to the guard
08:16We all have three national ID numbers.
08:17And all of us have pictures of ugliness in it
08:19Marshall believed that nationality
08:20It guarantees all people their basic rights
08:23They are all united under one homeland.
08:25And it doesn't differentiate between them
08:28Muhammad is not wearing a spit
08:30By God, Azin, this picture is perfect and very sweet on paper.
08:32So we know, my dear
08:33Those who give you citizenship
08:34Or the ones you take from
08:35Let's start with a simple question
08:36What is nationality?
08:37In her book
08:40You'll say Professor of Political Sociology Christine Sorak
08:43Citizenship is often presented as a contract between you and the state.
08:47You have a set of rights, and those who exercise them have a set of duties.
08:51Duties such as paying taxes or performing military service
08:54Or if you participate in the elections
08:56But these duties aren't always the most important thing.
08:58For example, sometimes taxes are taken from anyone residing in the country.
09:01Even if he didn't have her nationality
09:03And something like compulsory military service isn't the case in all countries, for example, in all countries.
09:05We're talking about countries that don't need it at all.
09:13The rights you will receive will outweigh the obligations you have.
09:16Education, health and social care for retirees or the unemployed
09:20The right to vote and run for office
09:22And obtaining protection inside and outside the country
09:25And outside this country, my dear, it's very important, we need to be careful.
09:27Because to the world you are known by your nationality, by the color of your passport.
09:30Your nationality will then give you the right to travel to certain countries or not to travel to them.
09:34Whether you travel with or without a visa
09:37The simplicity of your nationality will determine what your country will give you and what you will take, and how other countries will treat you.
09:43Depending on many variables, the advantages of your nationality are determined by many factors.
09:47The first thing, for example, is the economic conditions.
09:49Christine tells us, for example, that the average annual income of a citizen in Tajikistan is around five thousand dollars.
09:54They are being exploited in a closed and rigid system with neither good public education nor a decent pension.
09:59For example, consider the average annual income of a Burundian citizen, which is, God willing, $300.
10:06His average age is 57 years
10:08Meanwhile, a citizen of his age in Finland lives an average of 80 years and has an annual income of $42,000.
10:14Can you imagine, my dear, that your country might affect your lifespan?
10:17My dear secularist, statistically your nationality affects your age.
10:20This is what economist Branko Milanovic calls it
10:24Your nationality can give you opportunities and privileges
10:26For example, like Finland, or it might be an obstacle and hinder you in other countries.
10:29According to him, some nationalities might remain
10:33It means it might burden you
10:35More than anything, it's a resource or asset that helps and gets you out
10:39Meaning, instead of being something that pushes you upwards
10:41This could be something that sets you back
10:43Also, my dear, there are many political reasons that affect your nationality.
10:46Among the elements that affect your nationality rights and obligations
10:50These are the political circumstances
10:51This, for example, is evident in unstable countries.
10:53There's something I'm hiding tomorrow, what will happen?
10:55This makes it necessary for citizens to want comprehensive plans that secure their lives.
10:58Christine notes, for example, that the three regions where citizens are most willing to buy a second citizenship are
11:04They are China and the countries that broke away from the Soviet Union.
11:07and some countries in the Middle East
11:08This is simply because some of these countries, with their passports, might have a bad reputation in some powerful countries.
11:14For example, if you have a Russian passport, it's very difficult for you to go and live and work and have a normal life in America or Europe.
11:20There will be challenges, at least if you have an Afghan passport, for example; some countries will be willing to let you in easily.
11:24And of course, my dear, we all know which passport is the most popular: the American passport, of course.
11:30Marafou Abu Ahmed Ma'nouma Helwa
11:32What's new about that?
11:32The strange thing, my dear, is not that they are Russian citizens, or Chinese citizens, or citizens in some Middle Eastern regions.
11:38Those who want to change their nationalities are the holders of the most powerful passport in the world, the American passport; they also want to change their nationalities.
11:45Should I tell you that the number of citizens in the United States of America who want other nationalities doubled at the beginning of 2015?
11:50Oh Abu Ahmed, the people who are being arrogant about a city, someone who has an American passport and leaves it
11:54Okay, my dear, you've become like Ibn Butrik, who keeps posting stories about Afsha and writing "Prince of Hearts" and "Prince of Hearts."
12:01He has inside
12:02Americans seeking other nationalities do so for many reasons, such as the fact that American citizenship might put its holder at risk in certain places.
12:09He tells you that the blood of the American patient is enough for us to kidnap him and release a ransom, or we want to overwhelm the Americans in a military operation, so we kidnap Americans.
12:16And their names
12:16Besides, the political circumstances in the country itself, in America, for example, the case of Souad Tramadol, which many Americans disagree with.
12:22With his ideas or policies
12:23They believe that life under his presidency will be a nightmare, and also, my dear, there's a very important economic reason, like the many taxes that citizens face.
12:31He pays it even if he's outside of America.
12:33So, my dear, you're still working in Egypt, paying your taxes to America, and you're comfortable in this world, I swear.
12:37A human being, Khouli, is suffering, according to a CMBC report. All these reasons made Adel the Americans who want citizenship.
12:43Secondly, it increased from a mere complaint to more than five thousand citizens annually seeking another nationality.
12:48Since almost all of us don't necessarily choose where we'll be or the nationality we'll acquire, changing your nationality is like...
12:55By changing the contract between you and the state
12:57She says, "No, I didn't choose anything, I didn't sign anything, I'm not playing, I just want a new nationality, but unfortunately, the issue isn't about begging."
13:01The issue is more complicated than that.
13:03But, Muhammad, nationality isn't just a piece of paper telling you what you're entitled to and what you owe. Nationality is more than that; it's memories, identity, and culture.
13:10and language
13:11My dear, the second point you're making is that what you're saying is the homeland, not the state. The homeland and the state aren't always the same thing. The homeland
13:16It is the community that you feel you belong to and resemble its members, and this is related to how it makes you feel your identity.
13:22State and nationality are legal terms that are supposed to be devoid of any feelings or emotions.
13:27I choose to enter into a contract with someone who gives me certain rights and in return, I have certain obligations.
13:34The proof of this is that there are more than 2 million immigrants who went to America with their families when they were young and lived there for years, and they are not with them.
13:40nationality
13:41These people, my dear, are not legally American citizens, even though they grew up and became aware of their country, America.
13:48Although America is the only homeland they've ever known
13:50And the opposite is also true; there are people who hold the nationality of a specific country, like Saint Kitts, for example, just as we see artists, for instance, obtaining passports.
13:57Other countries
13:58Someone who's ever been to Saint Kitts or Dominica might never have even seen them on a map. We'll argue with the Prince of Song.
14:03The Arab doesn't have Dominican blood running through his veins
14:06It's perfectly normal for you to have a nationality or passport of a country, but not show the slightest interest or sense of belonging to it.
14:13My dear, as I told you, some nationalities have more advantages than others.
14:17This lack of equality between nationalities will result, in football terms, in the movement of players between nationalities.
14:22All those living with nationalities that have limited privileges will go en masse to request stronger nationalities.
14:28The one that gives a brief overview of rights and responsibilities is better.
14:30And Professor Muhammad Al-Barundi, the Burundian, what's his name again? I'm going to Finland.
14:33Oh, Amarda, God is my guide, and the world has become a small village, and the tree is gone.
14:36My dear, this is an idea I'm using because if you try it, you won't find it that easy.
14:39And you won't wake up tomorrow to find a group fare from one country to another.
14:43Our world is divided by borders, and the password that allows you to cross from one border to another is your nationality.
14:48Your nationality, the one you were born with, is unlikely to leave you easily, and it is what determines whether you will be able to travel or not.
14:53If you had a code, where could you travel to? And how?
14:55When you tell someone, for example, that a dear Afghan citizen is born to find the whole world has blocked him
14:59What do you see, my dear, in the sinners before you?
15:00The whole world is red, my dear, and not all of these countries are Al-Ahly supporters; these are people who just don't want to see your face.
15:04Just because of Facebook
15:05No one is sitting with you, talking to you, listening to you, or hearing your thoughts.
15:08No! It's just that little piece of paper in your hand that will either get you in here or not.
15:12If you have these few Spanish papers, you're most welcome!
15:15You may remain a traitor, a swindler, and a thief, even if you are sixty years old
15:20But Azbani, please, Abasha Nour, take the privileges and advantages, take the access on arrival
15:25But you're an educated Afghan with a PhD, you're righteous and you love your family and you take your mother on Hajj every year.
15:31You have no connection to Al-Qaeda, its organization, or anything else.
15:34You can be liberal and support minority rights.
15:38But no, we won't let you into anything.
15:40Look at this shape, it's all the same, a customer like
15:42Look at the difference in red between here and here.
15:45I need help if I want to obtain another nationality, not for any reason other than God forbid.
15:49But because my grandmother was from Urukwe
15:51So, it means henna for the origins and for the patient who can get me into the Orokui without that.
15:56The truth is, obtaining a second nationality is something that happens.
15:58Your nationality will define your world.
16:00He will open doors for you
16:01The world also sets conditions for you in order to open doors for you.
16:04Let's see what the ways are to obtain citizenship.
16:06ready?
16:07I'm ready
16:08I issued a statement with him, saying, "I am in pain," and I recorded it.
16:11The first method, my dear, is land rights.
16:13This means that whoever immigrates to a country acquires its citizenship regardless of their parents' nationality.
16:16This method was adopted by countries like America, Britain, and many European countries.
16:20Mona Zaki will meet in the Newton game, 30 episodes, wanting to give birth in America.
16:23Zabba is a name given to New York.
16:25The second method is blood money.
16:26You are a citizen of your parents, regardless of where they were born.
16:29Most people obtain their citizenship through these two methods.
16:32If you really look closely at them, my dear, you'll find that humans have absolutely no control over them.
16:35Human beings are forced into protected areas because they don't like the place where they were born.
16:37Ahiz obtains a second nationality
16:38For example, countries like Hungary
16:40It might grant you citizenship if you prove that your ancestors were in that country.
16:43While countries like China, for example, almost never give their citizenship to anyone
16:47Even if you stayed there for years
16:49Some countries grant you citizenship when you apply, according to the conditions.
16:52Your art is that you become famous for it, it's not something you were born with.
16:54Conditions, for example, like you have to live in that country for a certain number of years.
16:57And you have a genuine intention to reside there permanently.
17:00For example, conditions like your age, your age, or a specific film.
17:03Good language skills and conduct
17:05You have a job within the country and you can sort yourself out
17:07Some countries require you to renounce your original citizenship.
17:11Of course, these conditions are not the Sabbath.
17:12Every country has its own circumstances and its own conditions.
17:14These differences mean that we can sit with people of different nationalities.
17:17And another one, as we saw, has no nationality.
17:19Of course, my father Ahmed, since that's how it is, belonging is in the heart.
17:21We'll see how many conditions there are in how many countries, meet them, and then get citizenship.
17:24Easy means
17:24Life is precious, but it's easy.
17:26We said that this difference creates a demand for the stronger nationality.
17:29This makes it easier, according to Dr. Christine, for nationality to be a commodity with a price.
17:33In a market where supply and demand determine the value of this commodity
17:36The country from which she is being asked will have its nationality granted to her.
17:38Why would I tell you this specifically?
17:39Be careful, this is a back-and-forth relationship.
17:41What will she take from you in return?
17:42Each country will give what it can, depending on what it needs.
17:44In some countries, for example, they want people with education and skills.
17:47These immigration programs specifically target the most vulnerable.
17:50And it makes it easier for them to obtain citizenship
17:52These countries are making concessions to attract the best minds.
17:54Professor of Law at the University of Toronto
17:56Ayl Shaker names this
17:59Citizenship means a gift in exchange for talent.
18:01Sami'a Hiba
18:02It sets an example for the United States of America.
18:04America was the first magnet trying to attract the best minds from all over the world.
18:09If we look, for example, at the Nobel Prize winners from 1901 to 1990
18:13We will find that approximately 100 Nobel Prize winners are Americans
18:16From fasting, a mother gives birth outside of America.
18:17Like, for example, Einstein or Zewail
18:19Either first-generation immigrants
18:21The United States relies on two factors to attract
18:25Those who are knowledge migrants
18:27Bring me Einstein, expelled from Germany
18:29But he learned genius and won
18:30No, I'm not here.
18:31Give him a seat at Princeton
18:32Let him work on the nuclear bomb for us.
18:34America boasts that it has large universities and research centers.
18:37Princeton University, the one Einstein went to
18:39The agency that Zewail went to
18:40And Stanford, where I went, was a great place.
18:42The situation remained as it was until another team entered the race.
18:45Canada, Australia, France, Sweden and others
18:48State, my dear, I realized
18:49True global competition
18:51Not on goods, services and natural resources
18:54But on humans and minds
18:57Today, my dear, is the richest region that could be in the world.
19:00In terms of the companies located there
19:01It is the Albayar region of California.
19:03This area has companies like Abi
19:05Google and Facebook
19:06Tesla and Nvidia Zone
19:08These are areas without fuel; you won't find oil or anything to grab and transport.
19:12No, it has brains.
19:13These minds generate more market value than those others.
19:17I have some amazing information for you, my dear.
19:18If you come, my dear Osama, what is the market value of Nvidia?
19:21Which is approximately three trillion dollars
19:23On the thirty thousand Nvidia employees
19:25He earns approximately one hundred million dollars
19:27This roughly means that an employee at Nvidia is worth one hundred million dollars.
19:30Here, the employee is the sole resource, and the mind is the resource.
19:33So what are countries doing to reward these minds?
19:36They decided to give immigrants an additional advantage, which is citizenship.
19:39The difference between citizenship and residency
19:40Citizenship is not easy to lose.
19:42This is a strong contract that you can also pass on to your children.
19:44Germany, for example, after it had banned foreign workers
19:46So I told you to come, and then it stopped.
19:48No, we give you citizenship and you can consider the country your country.
19:51Not only that, but it also now allows multiple nationalities.
19:53And she doesn't consider it betrayal
19:55A country like Australia has reduced the residency requirements for obtaining citizenship.
19:58Two or three years left
19:59Countries are now offering their nationalities as an incentive for foreigners
20:02A tool that distinguishes it from other countries
20:04Take the rights and privileges we have
20:05We have your field and your expertise
20:07Oh, Abu Hamad
20:08O enemy of the countries that are creating problems for us and want to attract us
20:10Oh, a girl who's attracted
20:11Dear, we're talking about nationality and passports.
20:14Also, my dear, there is something very important, which is the points system.
20:16You need to collect enough points to travel from one country to another.
20:20Some countries transform you based on your circumstances, life, experiences, and education.
20:24For a group of points
20:25And you evaluate them based on that.
20:26Canada, for example, has a detailed points system for the type of immigration they are applying for.
20:30Well, you get points depending on your qualifications.
20:32Everywhere you have more academic qualifications
20:35A master's degree or two doctorates, for example, get you more points.
20:37The more practical experience you have
20:39The more your age is suitable
20:40This means that from 18 to 35, you get the highest points.
20:43Because you're still at the age of work and sweetness
20:45And the older you get, the fewer points you have.
20:46This system is just what you were doing
20:48Countries like Australia and New Zealand do it.
20:50The required points vary from year to year.
20:52According to supply and demand
20:53And the offer is always big
20:55The lucky countries are in the least favorable position.
20:57Big, powerful countries that people want to go to
21:00She's the one who sits with her legs crossed.
21:02And choose the best of the best
21:04So you'll find these countries telling you
21:05No, you're a worker, you can come alone.
21:07But don't bring your family with you.
21:08But what's this? You got a doctorate?
21:09No, come here and bring your family.
21:11Of course, and praise
21:12The countries these people travel from
21:13How does she protect her rights over these people?
21:15These countries are known for their exceptional minds.
21:18There are many questions, my dear.
21:19Mother countries benefit from their children.
21:21Those who change nationalities
21:22Because when these people travel
21:24They transfer money to people in the country
21:26We see this, for example, in a country like Lebanon.
21:28The money she received from abroad
21:29It might be more important than the money she receives from within.
21:33There are other countries that consider these missions
21:34Long security missions
21:36These people will travel abroad
21:37She works and earns money
21:39You learn and then spend money
21:41And she retires and educates our youth
21:43Sometimes, even those chosen by countries are considered heroes.
21:45He contributes to the national project
21:47That they become role models
21:49You see Mohamed Salah like this in England
21:50Hurry up, Abu Hamad, with all due respect to these circumstances.
21:52All these nationalities and all these challenges
21:54I'm not going there in a hurry.
21:55I don't want to take points and wait for how many years?
21:58And he paid a sneeze
21:58No, I don't want to hear that.
21:59The proverb says
22:00Where is your money, and where is your self-respect?
22:01Nationality is what you're talking about.
22:02It is possible to legislate
22:03Oh Azizi, you are in the era of free images
22:05Everything is legally permissible.
22:06Even your conscience, Abu Hamad
22:07With appropriate steps
22:08Yes
22:08What we said
22:09Countries still need something.
22:11Who is the person offering it to her?
22:11Sometimes countries still have some left over.
22:13But there's a type of money.
22:14These countries are announcing programs.
22:16To grant citizenship to investors
22:18In appreciation, it remained
22:19The satisfaction that contributes to the state's economy
22:21physically
22:22I need official programs for specific procedures.
22:24You can find them on government websites.
22:25And it is promoted at conferences like
22:27Global Citizens Forum
22:28Conferences where businessmen gather
22:30Those who are the target audience for this topic
22:32And it exploits the fame of actors of De Niro's stature, for example
22:34For those attending the conference in 2017
22:36A few singers, political figures, and public figures
22:39And so on
22:39My dear, this isn't about bribery.
22:40Take the money and get the citizenship
22:42No, there's an application.
22:43To prove it, you need reports and certificates.
22:45It talks about your financial situation and your health condition
22:48This is in addition to your legal status and investment status, of course.
22:50More than 20 countries offer this service.
22:52Every year, 50,000 people obtain passports this way.
22:55It's true that they are mostly small countries.
22:57Its economy depends on it, like investments.
22:59But here, citizenship is the most important service.
23:01That means I won't provide you with health insurance.
23:03Christine says that these countries are mostly small countries.
23:05Its economy depends on these investments.
23:07Here, citizenship becomes one of the most important services that these countries offer.
23:11And let me tell you, it brings in more revenue for the government than the taxes it collects.
23:15It's possible that you don't have a country where most of its money and economy, for example...
23:18We build on oil, for example
23:20It's quite possible that you don't have a country that issues nationalities.
23:22For example, you have a country like Summit Kitts
23:24This is a small country with about 55,000 people.
23:26Didn't you say Bash Rbra or the gathering?
23:27This is the program's title
23:28What the state takes from the citizenship
23:30It constitutes approximately 40% of the GDP
23:34These countries are telling you, sir, you don't have to come and live here at all.
23:36Because if everyone, regardless of religion or nationality, came here, they'd only stay for two days.
23:39The country will be crowded
23:40We cannot expect all our citizens
23:42You have the limit of your money
23:43And those who prefer the passport, we don't want to see the faces of the other people.
23:46I'm not maneuvering at any time
23:47Why keep your nationality in a state of confusion and disarray?
23:49Hamad, the investment decision is good.
23:51So, the issue is worth selling your nationality?
23:53Honestly, my dear, what's the deal with supply and demand?
23:55Depending on the country, what will you offer me?
23:56And the success of any deal is measured
23:58It's the difference between what you pay and what you receive.
24:00State of Zimmars
24:01If you obtain its citizenship, you will be able to enter the European Union.
24:03What, my dear, you're asking for investments to get citizenship?
24:05$2.5 million
24:07While smaller Caribbean countries require you to pay between $100,000 and $200,000
24:20Yes
24:20Actually, according to the statistics
24:22Only 4% of what it offers for passports of this small section
24:26There will always be someone around them who is grateful
24:26And I want to tell you that 50% of those who work on this program deserve thanks
24:29This is the highest primary percentage
24:30For most
24:31They might be doing it for other reasons.
24:33For example, you have a Syrian citizen
24:35He has a European appearance and is white.
24:36The first thing he looks at is his passport.
24:38He begins to treat him with suspicion, doubt, and racism.
24:41He is here
24:41If his passport changes, his life changes.
24:43This, my dear, is what someone like Pavel Durov did.
24:45Founder in Connecticut
24:47This is my dear Facebook friend from Russia.
24:48After the Russian government pressured him to leak personal data
24:51Especially for opponents who use the site
24:53He went and got Saint Kitts citizenship
24:55After that, he lived in Dubai
24:56For example, you have Arkady Voloz
24:58Founder of Yandex, which is the Google of Russia
25:00Which is the application of Yango that you see in the ads
25:02He obtained Maltese citizenship in 2016
25:04There are also countries that treat foreigners more amicably.
25:07And it provides them with privileges
25:08Much more than the locals
25:09Sometimes having foreign citizenship helps you live in certain countries.
25:14More than if you were a native of it
25:16As you can see, each country has its own price.
25:17And in a chain reaction, each flea lives according to its blood supply.
25:20If your total score didn't qualify you for a passport from a European Union country, you'll still need one.
25:23In small countries with lower numbers
25:25The European Union appreciates your intervention.
25:26And your situation there might be better than in your home country.
25:29Christine Soral says, "My dear"
25:31She's telling us, my dear, will you recognize who it is, Abu Hamid?
25:32Six what, my dear?
25:39Nationality, oh system, is often its function
25:41It's not a joke, folks. Come inside.
25:43No, this is a filtering system.
25:45We basically don't want anyone to enter.
25:46Anlis, we'll gain more from each one of you by gathering your citizens and their borders.
25:51And please, no one should send citizens to another country.
25:53Pakistani, stay Pakistani
25:54What are you doing in Britain?
25:55Huh?
25:55Keep in mind that all the migrations we're talking about
25:58They make up no more than 3% of the total human population.
26:01This means that most of the time people actually prefer to stay in their place.
26:04The result is that the countries you most likely don't want to leave
26:07It gives you the option to leave
26:08The opposite is also true, and this is intentional.
26:10The borders are set by the lucky ones.
26:11So that he can build on the less fortunate person, that he will come to him
26:13According to American economist Lant Brecht,
26:16Immigration to major countries will increase fivefold.
26:18If there's no Visa card
26:20The countries where citizens live in poverty and under difficult circumstances
26:23She doesn't set limits
26:24The difference between the border between America and Canada
26:25The border between America and Mexico
26:27Here we want to build a wall
26:28Welcome!
26:29Look how strict the borders are
26:31And you know what the situation of the people who are locked up is like
26:33And this isn't just visible at the borders.
26:35But also in the literature of peoples
26:36Those whose residents are looking to emigrate
26:37Or those imprisoned by closed borders
26:39For example, the novel Exat Was by the Pakistani writer Mohsin Hamid
26:42This man imagines a world where the afflicted East still exists.
26:45But the borders disappear and magic doors appear.
26:48And through these magical doors
26:50The heroes can move from one country to another.
26:52It's true that it sounds like a literary novel idea far removed from reality.
26:56But of course, it contains many real ideas.
26:57Ideas that attempted to overcome the prison of nationality
27:00Even if it is revolutionary or idealistic
27:02For example, June 25, 1948
27:04American fighter pilot Gary Davis will enter the American whistle in Paris
27:08There he announces his renunciation of his citizenship
27:11My neighbor will say he didn't do anything strange
27:12Rather, it is a text containing the human being of the United Nations
27:15The one who says that he has the right to renounce his citizenship
27:17He chooses a new nationality
27:18And what nationality did Abu Ahmed choose?
27:20The highest people of Damietta
27:21My dear neighbor will announce that the boy is number one.
27:24The first citizen will have the nationality of the world.
27:27It is the homeland of the earth
27:27The year 1953 was established
27:31This is a global government that issues citizenship documents and passports.
27:35For any citizen of the world
27:36My dear, this man may seem crazy to you.
27:38No, Abu Ahmad, because he's American, he's white.
27:40It's perfectly normal, I'll do it and it'll be fine
27:42My dear, it will pass normally.
27:43The movement gained very strong support.
27:45People like Einstein and Albert Camus supported it.
27:47My neighbor wanted to let the world know that a person can have a homeland that they love.
27:51This is something that doesn't necessarily have to change.
27:53But the issue isn't just about nationality, and patience has its limits.
27:55Or, as he put it, regarding the difference between patriotism and nationality
27:58I may be stateless, but I am not without a homeland.
28:04And yet, my dear, he was arrested 32 times at airports throughout his life.
28:08Every time they asked him for a passport, he pulled out that thing he made into a "good job"
28:11Sham Al-Jakh worked on it and I will sail without limits
28:14But despite these difficulties, by the time of his death
28:16In 2013, his virtual government, Aziz, produced 2.5 million documents.
28:21It included seven hundred and fifty thousand registered and citizen
28:25By 2020, the boy's Service Authority (WSA)
28:29Seven hundred and fifty thousand passports were issued
28:31The passport's design indicates that its holder is a citizen of the world.
28:34It is written in the most widely spoken languages ​​in the world.
28:36These passports are used by refugees and statesmen I told you about
28:40Although this passport is international, it's completely useless.
28:41But perhaps, my dear, virtual passports
28:44These people who are stateless feel like it's their first time getting citizenship easily.
28:47But let me tell you that some countries have responded to my neighbor
28:50And his passport was recognized as if it belonged to a country.
28:52Ancient and large countries like Ecuador, Zambia, Mauritania, and Mauritania Faso
28:56My neighbor sent his passport and government documents to each person to visit his country.
28:59For example, the American Edward Snowden
29:01Remember the person who leaked American intelligence secrets?
29:04And then he kept jumping around between countries, denying everything.
29:06Life, my dear carpenter, and the whole world know that this is a symbolic movement.
29:11Simbulik, Abu Ahmad, Simbulik
29:12But despite its symbolic nature, it showed the world all those who supported her.
29:16Many people share the same feelings
29:18Regarding the idea of ​​nationality, and the lack of justice and equality between one passport and another.
29:22The subject of Yeban is imaginary.
29:24But the idea of ​​the United Nations, for example
29:25Or perhaps the world's forces are symbolically coalescing into a single entity.
29:28It was also a fantastic idea
29:29The idea started with Emmanuel Kahn
29:31The one who lives as an isolated philosopher
29:32He didn't leave the boundaries of his city, Conix Bird.
29:34However, it was actually printed long after his death.
29:36Who is Harf, my dear?
29:37Dream on, maybe one day the idea of ​​the slave girl will come true.
29:40We all become global citizens
29:42The Citizens
29:43And then we won't need any more patience or resources.
29:46And then anyone can go to any place they want.
29:48If you want to travel, go to the bus station and see what you can board.
29:50In the end, my dear, because I know people listen to me and apply my advice.
29:53The goal of this episode is not
29:54If we point to the borders and the law
29:56But I dream, just like many people dream.
29:58The person becomes numb
30:01He enjoys the bounty of the earth
30:02He enjoys world cultures
30:04The people of the world enjoy
30:05He can travel and get whatever opportunities he wants.
30:08He remains with a passport that tells the people around him that he is just like them.
30:11Of course, we know that the matter doesn't end here.
30:14And the head is not inside
30:15It undermines things and leads to dividing people into classes and creating divisions.
30:18No problem, you have a passport of such and such degree
30:21No worries, you have a passport.
30:22It came out in such and such a year
30:23And we are the passports that came out after such and such a year
30:25We consider them to be certain things.
30:26That's all, my dear brother, or rather, our brother.
30:28Let's look at the past and see what the future holds.
30:29We are sharing the messages that we have received from the channel.
30:31Regardless of your nationality, color, religion, or gender
30:34or your social class
30:35But dear, we hope that we will all remain equal.
30:38But there will always be people who are more equal than others.
30:40And I am one of those people
30:41It means, my dear, that there is no privilege one feels.
30:43Unless he is a resident of the people around him
30:45This is a scientific fact
30:46I mean, if I could be happy, it would be as long as we improve how everyone is doing.
30:48Hamadi, I want to ask you something at the end of the episode.
30:50I want you to let me get a lot of penises
30:52Where did you get these Zabir from, my dear?
30:54Dear, please write this down.
30:56When he entered the seventh place, it wasn't an embassy.
30:58Go away, you sly one!
31:00Give three

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