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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
00:06Oh, Dr. Jaber, I'm tired. Oh, Doctor, all day long I hear like there's a bomb.
00:11It's going to explode! What's this, Moataz? I want you to calm down. Tell me, have you stopped taking your medicine?
00:20Honestly, it's been two weeks and it's clear we've relapsed into schizophrenia again.
00:24I want you to take a deep breath, Moataz, and remember that everything you're experiencing is just an illusion.
00:30Yeah, right, there's no bomb, nothing's going to explode, you're a fan.
00:41Oh, Dr. Tamer, it's me, Jaber. You're acting like a psychiatrist again, Doctor? I'm back to pretending I'm a psychiatrist again!
00:49Jaber, it's clear we've gone back to the same old identity crisis again.
00:53You're right, I told you I'd have to stop taking the medication for a while.
00:57I want you to take a deep breath and remember that you're not a doctor, there's no bomb, and there's no Moataz.
01:05You're right
01:07But I didn't mention Qanbalah or Mu'taz.
01:19Dear viewers, peace be upon you in this new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
01:23Hassan Al-Mashhadeen, who kept me sitting by your hand until May 25, 1978
01:28A very peaceful and pleasant day at Northwester College
01:30One of our shoes, from the tears, finds a mail-order truck located in the garage.
01:34I don't know who he's coming from or who he's going to.
01:36They're still going to examine the grave of the Afoush junction, my dear.
01:39Oh center, oh praise be to God, start with your conscience, choose your beginning, my brother
01:42My dear, don't worry, your relatives are just writing rudimentary books, and the man only got a few scribbles.
01:46The question here is, who was this expulsion from?
01:48Ya Zi Azzi Min?
01:49The expulsion was originally sent to a professor at an art institute.
01:52Rensselaer Institute
01:53Because the package was larger than the mailbox, the package was thrown to the ground.
01:57Rahmad, I don't know anything about this incident.
01:58Hello my dear, this incident is less strange than the one I'm about to tell you about.
02:02On May 9, 1979, a technical man named Ali Baba Allah worked at the same university.
02:06He had a package in front of him, Jay looked at it, and a branch was in his face.
02:09He also sustained minor injuries.
02:11That's not all, we have a third incident.
02:13On 15 December 1979, Mafakh was expelled
02:16But where will it explode this time?
02:18On the Boeing 727
02:19And again, the incident passed without any fatalities.
02:21One of them is me, I'm fed up with the Boeing that's like shit
02:23And she remains the second most dangerous intermediary after the main machine
02:25But you come and think and feel secure
02:27If a bomb passes through the airport and reaches the plane
02:30Here we have a problem
02:32And that's what alerted the FBI
02:34Two students were expelled from Ward University; one student had a problem with the professors.
02:36Just like you, coaches for the doctor.
02:38But these countries took the top issue
02:39But a package was sent from the airport and exploded on a plane.
02:42This is very big
02:43The FBI has begun its investigation.
02:44He began to connect the three ideas together
02:46And here, Biomesl arrives at a terrifying truth.
02:48We are facing a terrorist targeting universities and airplanes in the United States of America.
02:52A terrorist is about to embark on a very dangerous chase with the FBI.
03:04For 18 years, my dear, you've been complaining about the difference between FBI agents.
03:07They reach up to 150 officers
03:09He investigated it with more than 10,000 defendants.
03:11With average expenses and costs of $50 million
03:14On the other hand, the man is working, he doesn't stop.
03:16It's not about God anymore, investigations and money, the man will blow himself up, he will blow himself up
03:19We see the year 1880
03:21A bomb explodes inside a mailbox
03:22Percy Wood, president of Etihad Airways, is affected.
03:26And I still didn't make a death
03:27But it caused very severe injuries
03:30At this point, the FBI will label this terrorist a "plane and university terrorist."
03:34UNA Boomer
03:35My dear, you're a specialized terrorist.
03:37Specializations in aircraft design and universities
03:39It's strange that he doesn't go and blow up my supermarket.
03:41Order library clinic
03:43No universities and no airplanes
03:45This is my job
03:45Al-Tamjali
03:46specific
03:46U here is an abbreviation for university
03:48UNA stands for United Airlines
03:50This is the company where the third explosion occurred on one of its planes.
03:53At this moment, my dear, the explosions are now being delivered after
03:56America has become a state of longing
03:57Every now and then it cuts off from our side
03:58The dear one preferred the topic that went on like this until 1982
04:01The thoughts suddenly stop
04:03Oh Abu Ahmed, the terrorist who repented
04:04Hello, happy ending!
04:05Okay, so what are you going to tell us about?
04:06Honestly, my dear Garba the terrorist
04:07At that time he was pursuing postgraduate studies
04:09The tooth explosions it causes aren't that great.
04:11And it doesn't blatantly insult people and slander them
04:13So he decided to seclude himself for three years.
04:14Until May 15, 1985
04:16To counter the Yuna Bomber with much more powerful bombs
04:20Bombs targeting someone like John Hauser
04:22Professor of Computer Science at the University of California
04:24Then he started targeting Boeing in Washington.
04:26Accidents have increased, but the goals haven't changed.
04:28The man is dedicated to his field of expertise.
04:30This is a large number of universities specializing in technology and aviation.
04:33Benhey Al-Yuna Bomber in 1985
04:34In an incident with a person named Theo Scruton
04:37A student at the University of California found a bag in the back of the store where he works.
04:40But this time the explosion was powerful enough to kill him.
04:43And here's the Yuna Bomber, my dear, the first time I've been to the...
04:46The situation will calm down again in two years.
04:49And suddenly on February 20, 1987
04:51An employee in Salt Lake City
04:53You'll find a wooden box in a car park.
04:55Well, this is outside the scope of the specialty, Hamad.
04:57A glitter box in the parking lot, I want to go
04:59The employee, dear, thought the same thing and put the money in the box for the manager.
05:02Because suddenly the kiss explodes and causes serious injuries
05:04The difference in this incident is the satisfaction
05:06The employee saw the same Yona Bomber
05:08She saw him in a movie shot, standing and watching the scene from afar.
05:12He was in the car park watching his show
05:14He was wearing a coat and black glasses
05:16The police began sending out a description of the six women, including a rough sketch.
05:19The image circulated throughout America, even though it wasn't clear.
05:21As you can see, nothing is visible on his face.
05:23A picture of Aziz is circulating around America
05:25What happens next?
05:27How long will it be completely quiet?
05:29six years
05:30What happens is that the attacks return again in June 1993
05:33This is the first time my dear has seen a terrorist take a bribe.
05:35He started studying, attending conferences, and developing himself.
05:38And this time the basin will be filled with booby-trapped packages.
05:40He reaches one of the most important geneticists in America
05:42Dr. Charles Epstein
05:44The doctor only had a broken eardrum and fingers after the bombing.
05:47Unibomber doesn't stop anyone here
05:49We prefer to continue discussing his bizarre crime rates intermittently.
05:52And my dear, that's how things are.
05:53The perpetrator is unknown until a message reaches the New York Times.
05:57This message is a claim of responsibility for these bombings.
06:00A club called Freedom Club
06:01The club that proclaims itself as an anarchist group focused on technology
06:05He declares himself responsible for these actions.
06:07In February 1995, the New York Times received a second letter offering
06:11Offer from FC Freedom Club
06:13They say they are ready to stop these exploding parcels.
06:16They published a 35,000-word statement called "The Industrial Community and the Making of Its Future."
06:20Hey, Professor? Do you want someone to publish your work?
06:22I also tell them to leave the FBI alone because they're just a joke.
06:25We'll send you the statement, return it like that, release it, and we'll finish with the bombings.
06:28And I'm currently using Font 16 Bold so that it's between us for the garage.
06:31Adding to the pressure, a message to Los Angeles airport followed.
06:33It is determined by blowing up a water plane on a random water day.
06:37We'll shoot down a water bomb whenever we want.
06:40The airport has entered a state of permanent retirement.
06:42My dear, the people at the airport are prepared and ready for the bomb.
06:45Until Jahed gives them another answer, telling them we're just joking
06:47What? We were just joking around, we wanted to annoy the passengers, take off their shoes, search them more, and delay them.
06:53We said we would ride the passengers
06:54My dear Arab friend, there remains a very fragile psyche.
06:56You may have noticed that newspapers here still play a very significant role in the game.
06:58The description of whoever receives this statement is that the ball is now in the FBI's court.
07:01Should we support this statement or not? This is where the security team split.
07:05We are publishing a statement from a terrorist bomber in our arms.
07:08We were essentially telling him, "Do whatever you want, and we'll carry out your requests."
07:11Because we are afraid of you
07:11We will not refuse and put our lives and the lives of others at risk.
07:14And my dear, the document is still quite long, 35,000 words.
07:17This is ten episodes of Al-Daheeh
07:19The episode with us, dear, contains 3000-3000-500 words
07:21My dear, keep it up, with all the jokes!
07:24So, we were going to release ten episodes from our own dedicated channels.
07:26Explosions are generally easier than reading all this.
07:28But they found an advantage in the size of this behen
07:30A document of this size, if published, could lead us to the experienced person.
07:33We're sure to find someone who knows how to write it.
07:35Has anyone heard these ideas and Harry reported them?
07:37Does anyone know the contexts?
07:39What happened was that on September 19, 1995
07:41The Washington Post is disseminating the message of the American Unibomber
07:45It is published in a 6-page, large-format supplement.
07:48The henna, my dear, comes down from here
07:50The controversy is being stirred up throughout America.
07:53What you said about God happened in the debate
07:54These are serious crimes committed by serial killers.
07:57A deranged person like Jeffrey Dahmer
07:59Zodik Ahmed Fahmy
08:01Zodiac, for example, was sending coded messages to the police.
08:03Which are his snacks, any page
08:05His summit
08:05Besip Signature
08:06emoji
08:07Anything that says so-and-so was here
08:08But what's strange here is that American society was surprised
08:11We have someone who commits a series of terrorist acts and has a philosophy
08:14His signature is six large pages long
08:17What kind of bomber has all these philosophical arguments?
08:20My dear life, the statement was asking a very important question.
08:22Listen to this: Is technology in our favor as humans or against us?
08:25Dear life, the statement was very carefully written.
08:27But the one who wrote it exposed himself.
08:29His scent was evident amidst the conversation
08:31One of the readers was named Linda Patrick
08:41And the answers he sent you are similar
08:42Here David Kazinski is looking at her, and Abroha is saying to her
08:44Yoon, are you getting married and are you still sending letters?
08:46Oh boy, you're giving them a higher grade, that's a shame.
08:47Here the six of them say to him, "My son, what blood are we talking about?"
08:49Your brother is a terrorist
08:51The writer of this statement is probably the boys' uncle.
08:53Well, I'm single, excuse me.
08:54In fact, David took the statement and began to read it.
08:56And shock
08:57The statement resembled his brother's method.
08:59David Kaczynski was indeed caught between a rock and a hard place.
09:01Either he hands his brother over to justice
09:03Either his conscience will haunt him forever
09:05To avoid the conscience
09:07David is improving his situation and informing the FBI.
09:09Guys, I swear I reported him so he could inherit.
09:11But this statement can only come from him.
09:13David, my dear, was more eager to help than to rescue.
09:16At that time, the number of suspects had reached 2417 people.
09:20The last usable number was 2416
09:23Then he nominated the Jot, and my father wrote all these people's texts.
09:29Value of the published statement, first draft
09:32This is because he found him at the family home.
09:34Because suddenly his shares started to rise
09:36And the eye remains on him
09:37Kazinski's peg ranks first in terms of subscriber value
09:40On April 3, 1996
09:42The FBI is taking action.
09:4378 federal agents corner Ted in a secluded cabin in the Montana woods
09:48A hut, neither in water nor in a cart
09:50And here, my dear, ends a 17-year journey of parcel bombs.
09:54There were 17 explosions in them
09:56Three lives were lost and 23 were injured.
09:58In a vision, my dear, of course there is a very important question
10:01Who is Ted Kaczynski?
10:02Ahmed, I'm upset
10:04Why, my dear?
10:04Firstly, we are supposed to address these questions.
10:06Why did you ask the question?
10:07Secondly, I've noticed that the YouTube quawars
10:09This little one isn't finished yet.
10:11Why is the fight scene in the middle of the episode?
10:13I'm not roasted yet.
10:14I'm leaving you and going to the siss, Mahmoud Mahdi.
10:16First of all, my dear Mahmoud Mahdi, I'm not free for you.
10:17The guy is doing a great stream, a great movie, and a great match.
10:20He fears competition with the Duck
10:21He goes to the round of 16 alone, and he goes to the round of 16 with Amer Al-Sharif.
10:24The man isn't available for you.
10:25Mahmoud Mahdi Ahmed Shober YouTube
10:27Baqeem during content creation
10:28Anyway, my dear, let's get back to the topic. I'm below.
10:30If I had been too long with you, what would we have been talking about?
10:31Ah, Ted Kaczynski
10:32Yes, this criminal
10:33Who is this criminal?
10:34On May 22, 1942
10:37Petold Ted Kaczynski
10:38And he's no longer an ordinary child.
10:40prodigy
10:40With an IQ of 167 points
10:43That's a very large number, my dear, not just in IQ.
10:44This is a big fantasy
10:45Stephen Hawking is said to have an IQ of
10:47It was 168 points
10:48We are dealing with an exceptional child.
10:50In 1958
10:51Ted is taking a Harvard scholarship
10:53He is barely 16 years old
10:55Some people have described him as the new Einstein
10:58Ted is graduating from college
10:59He is pursuing a PhD in pure mathematics.
11:01My dear uncle, this is a recipe specifically for Mrs. Ted.
11:03It's just a game for him.
11:05And if I spent my life in this field
11:06Keep playing
11:07I'm not the one wasting time on pure mathematics.
11:09Not only that
11:09Ted, 1968
11:10I was appointed as an assistant professor
11:12At the University of California
11:13Because after 4 years
11:14He's the one who should resign and leave.
11:15And with all the money he made from the university
11:16He's going to buy a cabin in Montana
11:18Ted, my dear, when he gets wet and is told
11:19Someone is leaving academic life
11:21And he walks
11:21You are a doctor at the university
11:23Student promotion
11:24Download projector
11:24Look at the projector
11:25Books are being written in your name
11:26The family buys it with pleasure.
11:27I was working making
11:28Ted says he accepted the university runner-up position
11:30To make money
11:31I'm taking the academy route
11:33I'm building a bridge because I'm a farmer.
11:34All I want to do
11:35A little money
11:35And buy the one that's art
11:48The idea that I won't stay like this
11:49I won't live alone
11:50No, I will take a stand against industrial society.
11:53The one we are living in
11:54He started his work from the small corner
11:56The largest chase carrier
11:57For the elite of industrial society
11:59Scientists, CEOs, and tech companies
12:01And the rest is
12:02You fought them well
12:03We talked about it in the episode
12:04The man could see any production line in front of him
12:06Avoid
12:06Bermi Darts on the Sahwar Rahma Al-Suwaidi like that
12:08And you'll find him coming, strong too, at the end of the horses.
12:09Then Aziza stopped being clownish.
12:10If you think about it, you'll find he's a terrorist of a special kind.
12:13In his book, Terrorism: A Very Short Introduction
12:15The writer Charles Townsend considered
12:16One of the biggest problems of terrorism
12:18There are many definitions of it.
12:19Because this terrorist described a worker like that
12:21The oppressor or the slanderer
12:23Nobody takes it off themselves
12:24Nobody says, "I am the terrorist so-and-so."
12:26This is a definition that guides the public or the government.
12:29For a person or organization, an act is practiced outside the context of society.
12:32Everyone in the world always has a specific stereotype of any terrorist.
12:36He might be a religious extremist
12:38He might be a political extremist
12:40He might be adopting a racist ideology.
12:42For example, the superiority of one race over other races
12:45Sometimes this terrorist might be a stupid, naive, and foolish person.
12:48There are people who are even more stubborn than him; he's holding the arm and moving it.
12:50The strange thing is that none of the descriptions I mentioned apply to Ted Grzeski.
12:53Nothing in the directors reinforces the stereotypical image of a terrorist.
12:56But he's coming out of the country and committing acts of terrorism.
12:58We are dealing with an intelligent and brilliant academic.
13:01Someone who has no religious or extremist political leanings
13:04But the irony is that terrorism, in its essence, is very much the same.
13:08Its essence is free from all these definitions.
13:10It completely breaks the stereotype of the terrorist
13:13He has the common essence that all terrorists share
13:16It is the use of violence to inflict shocks on society.
13:20Society changes by attacking it
13:21To force the victims of this violence over the course of 18 years
13:25If they listen to his words, they listen to his thoughts.
13:27I want a horn, I want a voice that can be heard
13:28And in this case, Kaczynski's statement was the one that was released.
13:31Industrial society and its future
13:33This statement is overflowing with documentation that we need to examine thoroughly.
13:36So that we can understand the motives of a criminal who was thinking
13:38He is able to choose the world
13:40He wanted to save the future with his own unique approach.
13:43Ahmed, you're here! You've got me excited.
13:44Is it possible to look at the statement?
13:45And the Prophet, do you want to look at the statement?
13:47Sit down, Ahmed. What's the problem?
13:48The one who is misguided, the one who is deceived, the one who is a boat on the one who is in the custard, the one who is looking at them
13:51Do you want to read a statement called "The Industrial Society and Its Future"?
13:54From 35,000 words
13:55You're the one who's getting hit by the Dabke rings, or what?
13:57You're counting episodes from the days when you were here with poetry
13:59The rest, my dear, begins with a very dramatic sentence.
14:02The Industrial Revolution and its consequences were a disaster for humankind.
14:06Ahmed, that's a modern statement.
14:07Ahmed, are you repeating this?
14:08Are you an Anarki?
14:09No, my dear, it's not your fault or anything like that.
14:10No, you are a wilderness and a desert dweller
14:11Hey, my dear, I'm conveying Tate Kaczynski's ideas to you.
14:13We, the Al-Jawati team, are about to embark on a journey into the mind of this strange man.
14:15Tate believed that industrial servitude was the main reason why our lives were difficult.
14:19Instead of making it easier for us, he made it even more complicated.
14:21Let everything around us become a source of material and psychological suffering.
14:25To understand this better, we need to ask a question.
14:27What makes you feel self-aware?
14:29What makes you feel free?
14:30Tedi, my dear, answered that question in just two words.
14:32Power process
14:33This is a four-step process
14:35Set a goal, put in the effort, achieve the goal
14:37Finally, as a result, you feel independent.
14:39It is believed that humans are creatures who strive for certain things and achieve them.
14:42Simply put, he controls his destiny.
14:44I know you don't see the importance of this.
14:46Just be patient with me
14:47The story isn't just about me, Hassan, that's what I'm saying.
14:49We all do things we don't understand; no one has truly experienced independence.
14:51This, my dear, is saying that all humans have basic goals.
14:55Food and tonics
14:56But the power process that he was referring to
14:58Its goals are much more complex than that.
14:59Let's, for example, imagine a goal for your life.
15:01Whether you write a book, remain a famous actor, or start a successful business
15:04These are goals that fall under the "power politics" that Kaczynski talks about.
15:08One goal plus effort equals one goal plus independence
15:11The problem, according to Kaczynski, is that in industrial society most people do not have freedom.
15:15She will set goals like these and achieve them.
15:17Society tells you year by year by year
15:19For the sake of power, prosciutto, and all that, we see this talk.
15:22Each one of them has an independent goal and achieves it independently.
15:26How does the factory operate?
15:27We are all company employees, working for the company.
15:29We work so that I can grow up alone.
15:30Each one grows up on their own.
15:31I'm older on my own, ah
15:33Each one grows up on their own, that's how it is with Mama.
15:35Here, I'm the only one growing up
15:36The industrial society of Kaczynski
15:38It is characterized by
15:40A society that needs specialists in specific goals is one that has been set by them.
15:44Technical needs, needs involving manufacturing, and so on.
15:47It's not based on the idea that everyone sets their own goal and achieves it.
15:50Community goals are tailored to you from the factory
15:53To the point that this society makes you feel that if you don't transform your whole life
15:56And your talents and abilities for this purpose
15:58So you are mentally ill and a failure
16:00Why did you find us useless?
16:02We are 200 people from 200,000 countries
16:04Gathered under one roof to make a can of tuna
16:06Everyone's imagination remains tuna
16:08Forget all your ideology, your ideas, your family.
16:11I want everyone to keep whistling lemonade on your work
16:13In his book entitled
16:15The one who works in 2009
16:15Mark failed, he wonders, in this study
16:17How can the capitalist who said his system should be successful
16:20It is a very large number, especially among young people, suffering from mental illnesses.
16:24That's the important question, Abu Ahmed.
16:25The issue is no longer limited to mental illness alone.
16:27There are organic diseases that I won't talk about.
16:28I say no, my dear Kazinski, if I were to answer this question
16:30He will tell you that most of these young people are in this capitalist world.
16:33You're working psychologically because not everyone is living up to their goals.
16:36You know, my dear, this is just like I told you, the power operation.
16:38His entire focus was on the word "process".
16:40Pross itself
16:40This means that the human being has moved in a continuous process of growth.
16:43In order to achieve his goals
16:45The goals he chose for himself
16:47Therefore, he can possess some power and control over his destiny.
16:50The process, or operation, according to Ted
16:51You waver between your self-respect
16:53And your feeling that you are an active person
16:55A process that preserves your psychological and mental well-being
16:57While in his opinion, if I were to waste many years of my life
17:00In achieving community goals
17:01Because you are being bribed for the available job
17:03The job I do well
17:04Society is what made me run well
17:06Why? Because he asked for it for his own purpose.
17:08You find yourself getting caught up in something that's forced upon you.
17:10I wish Ted Kazinski had told her the news.
17:11Serge, my dear, you'll always find in the word
17:14Serget Madras, which is in some societies
17:16The host mother, the mother who takes
17:18Another family's child is being cared for by their mother.
17:20Ted saw that this was a farhada fargha
17:22Yes, it will give you money, a job, and status.
17:24But the child inside you isn't yours.
17:26This job will give you everything in life, and you'll take from it as the most important thing in it.
17:29The meaning is, my dear, that you are here
17:30Act like a woman who sits for nine
17:32Whole months just for the end
17:34Why would someone take the child from her?
17:36The child inside her who isn't hers is the biggest example
17:38Regarding the power process, you will find it in the choices themselves.
17:40Ted, in his story, left the academic job
17:42The job that everyone considered a step forward
17:45The logical thing is that he has this stupidity
17:46And weak abilities are a natural limit in the brain.
17:48He remains a doctor and professor at the university, but
17:50And curse all of this, and curse city life and civilization.
17:53And progress will remain in the flaw alone
17:54If someone made all these decisions, people would consider it
17:57An abnormal person; people will argue about mental strength.
17:59How does a man think? Even though he
18:01A man exercising his very ordinary authority
18:03In determining the shape of his life and destiny
18:05What does he want to be doing? It's easy for him.
18:07And he will work at the industrial office.
18:08Not all the time tension, but there is tension and attraction
18:10You'll find it works with you in your choices
18:12If you feel empowered, I will address your needs in an alternative way.
18:14The spirit of playing sports and participating in humanitarian work
18:16It will give you options and freedom in choosing the series.
18:19What you'll see on Netflix
18:20It will give you the opportunity and freedom to choose things
18:22It makes no sense, finish your work.
18:24After that, do what you want, exercise your freedom.
18:26Take a half-hour break after work, before you go to sleep, and take a look around the world.
18:28Come on, hurry up and solve it, you're not a tree or anything
18:30In the industrial office, my dear, the question of education is a very complex one.
18:32For example, if you wanted to exercise your freedom
18:34If you raise your children in nature
18:36Let them now contemplate and play in nature.
18:38Like the children of the first human beings
18:40So, in another way, you judged them to be backward.
18:42About the rest of their classmates because of the children around them
18:44Their families are following the community's playbook.
18:56So, the decision you will make here is for your child.
18:58You, his mother, will bring him out of the shadow of the era
18:59His mother will raise him to be mentally ill, and this will result in each new generation of immoral people becoming more rebellious than the last.
19:04kiss
19:05We are all on the same wavelength as him.
19:06They've produced a very diverse generation; we're seeing strange symptoms in this new generation.
19:08For example, the insane depletion of entertainment resources.
19:11The demand for something like video games
19:13It increases from the second generation
19:14It also increases things like skipping school and social isolation.
19:16That's my dear, in normal industrial societies.
19:18It would be a very industrialized society.
19:21For example, South Korea and Japan
19:22The entire country is based on industry.
19:24For example, we see a phenomenon like the hikikomori phenomenon.
19:26This is a psychological and social disorder
19:28It expresses the people who chose with their full confidence
19:31If they withdraw from society
19:32People who are neither able to compete nor able to endure
19:34High standards of success and work
19:37We can't take it anymore, Instagram 6
19:38Forget it completely
19:40Because I feel like I'm making my choices
19:42For example, I chose to see you today
19:43I'm not too old to watch you
19:45She also chose what to eat and what to drink.
19:47And exciting things, by the way.
19:49This is what the industrial society offers you
19:52You will choose what to consume
19:54You won't choose to consume, and if you don't consume
19:56The community gives you a monthly envelope of cash in the form of a receipt.
19:58It makes you feel in control, independent, and individual.
20:01For two hours, during your child's birth
20:03You are free in all your choices
20:04Is this the chain or the chain?
20:06The first thing you do when you go outside and pass the cashier
20:08Society can deprive you of your freedom and independence.
20:10You want a big piece of paper called "The Account"
20:12My dear, this reminds me of the famous phrase about being optimistic.
20:15We buy things we don't need.
20:16With money we don't have, we warn humanity.
20:19We don't even like them, dear, your choice of me
20:20Society wants you to be a science expert.
20:22I want you to be a well-rounded intellectual.
20:24I love you if you find any brevity in your words
20:26Honestly, I feel this man is biased against technology and civilization.
20:28The bias is like those who want to bring back the rivals
20:30We want to go back to the old days when times were simple, sweet, and pleasant.
20:33I want to go back to the middle of the horns and blow them up
20:34My life could end at any moment for reasons that I can't explain.
20:37I'm getting a death chill
20:38Ali Qatir Mamusid Hasuni Malish Diya
20:41One of the nobles my sister loves has decided to kill me.
20:43I was very fragile in the past.
20:45I am not limiting the modern discussion to mental illnesses.
20:47My mental state is unclear; who's diagnosing me right now?
20:49Who can increase the average lifespan of a human being?
20:51Not technology, not industrial society
20:53It wasn't capital and man, but Zabak was dreaming
20:55The corn of Abdalia will have it in one week
20:56Welcome, my dear, your words reflect your dignity.
20:58As usual, I say this about the fish.
21:00Dear Herod, please accept this statement and tell you
21:02There is a very big difference between financial security
21:04And psychological security, and he tells you that the primitive human
21:06Despite all the mistakes surrounding him
21:08However, he is not terrified of the future and its destruction.
21:09Because of the stock market crash in America
21:11Or poor real estate is comfortable
21:12Today you are involved in many conflicts that are not your concern.
21:15She could be responsible for your own destruction
21:17Weapons you're not meant to use to kill
21:19She could be responsible for your death
21:21Secondly, my dear, I don't agree with this statement.
21:23But I'm just conveying a point of view to you.
21:24Where speech is needed, the primitive human has the ability to change.
21:27If I'm in a dangerous area
21:29I can go back, I can go back to the cave again
21:31If the land is dry, I'll look for the river again.
21:33But you as a modern human
21:35And you can't change the economy
21:36And you can't change the way of governance
21:38It is possible that they are two people living in the two villages, with a custom of being different from each other.
21:41They catch each other, the effect of the cowardice is heard in a cat
21:51Animal scientist John Carle
21:53He will conduct a series of experiments on Fran
21:55Fran, I searched for her, closed
21:57And completely protected from risks
21:59A small community brimming with unlimited resources
22:01Eat and drink as much as you want
22:03There's no need to worry about hunger, housing, or sex.
22:05But as the number of bakeries increased, they began to appear
22:07Violent behaviors
22:09Behaviors such as isolation and neglect of children by mothers
22:11Sometimes they kill their children.
22:13Birth rates have decreased
22:14The small community began to fall apart
22:16The study was conducted to understand the effects
22:18Population growth and its impact on human behavior
22:20What will we do to each other when we spend so much time in a small place?
22:23Again, all of this takes place in a well-regulated environment.
22:25An environment carefully designed with the resources we need.
22:27But those who miss this environment
22:29It is that its members do not exercise freedom of choice.
22:31Tedi, my dear, it was possible
22:33For example, he publishes his writings and remains
22:35Influential writer creates and publishes content
22:36No problem, any way to publish it is fine.
22:38His venting was peaceful, but Tad Krzysztof
22:41He decides to spread his ideas through crime.
22:43Because he knew that if he published
22:44His words were normal, no one would see them in the middle.
22:46The original ideas and information he encounters
22:48Human beings in modern society are being depleted
22:51People's brains are beyond anyone's control.
22:53He takes a new speech, so Abu Ahmed, the man
22:55This was an academic place that focused on academia.
22:57I speak with great academics, scientists, and thinkers.
23:00Okay, Abu Ahmed, complex ideas
23:01Don't reach the level of ordinary people like yourself.
23:03Okay? Look, my dear... if the ideas are complicated
23:05Why didn't you deliver it? I'm sure it didn't deliver to you.
23:06I'm sure that there's no one like Shaska in the world.
23:08And I'm also sure that I'm the only troublemaker in the world
23:10Is there anyone in your right mind who would cut their hair, Abu Ahmed?
23:12He also disbelieved in the scholars.
23:14He believed that scientists were chasing personal glory
23:16Much more than just benefit
23:27The one who made this bomb
23:28But the first thing he sees is the atomic bomb and its impact on reality.
23:32Betfak'i
23:32He is shocked
23:33What was so bad about what I did?
23:34As if this were his scientific discovery
23:36She acted like a horse that is prevented from seeing.
23:38It is centered on one face
23:39No one was going
23:40I can't see the bigger picture
23:41He doesn't see how the society around him has acted
23:43The industrial society, according to Ted
23:44Like any villain in the world
23:46There was once a good fetus
23:47Jenin, freedom is in your hands.
23:49An innocent dream exists that promises life will be easier
23:51Imagine if we went back to the grocery store of yesteryear
23:53We gave the Bedouin man a gift
23:55Take this Arabic
23:56And humans began to learn how to build their cars.
23:58I told them that everyone is free in their own language
24:00Whoever wants to drive, let them.
24:01And whoever doesn't want a car, that's fine.
24:02Everyone is free
24:03Over time, the number of cars will increase.
24:05People have to build roads so that cars can travel on them.
24:08After a while, there was a need for signals.
24:10To organize the movement
24:11Now you can start going anywhere far away
24:13Because you now have a car
24:14Where's that? Like work.
24:16Killing a year here made life easier
24:17But over time, houses will start to appear next to workplaces.
24:20Houses more expensive than yours
24:21And you will die and leave her
24:22Why? Because it saves you the cost or expenses of a car.
24:25But if your job is far away, you'll have to buy a car.
24:27Love suddenly brings up the idea of public transportation
24:29The idea of overcrowding won't appear.
24:31What did all this cost us?
24:32You don't understand
24:33Suddenly, according to him, my dear
24:35An invention designed to liberate humanity
24:37From the idea of the limitations of his body
24:38He moves it at a speed greater than the available speed.
24:40Suddenly, this invention made the whole society adapt and depend on it.
24:44And it changes its shape and features one by one
24:46So that it fits his size
24:47Today we are building cities
24:49Not because of humans
24:49We're building cities for cars
24:51Abu Ahmed
24:51Honestly, I understand what the man is saying.
24:53He felt that he was right on some points.
24:55But why is he still publishing this?
24:57terrorism
24:58Why do we manipulate the world to say what we want to say?
25:00Actually, my dear, that's also a valid question.
25:02But Ted saw that this capitalist society
25:05human, employee, or worker
25:08He feels alienated from them
25:09He senses a lack of meaning in them.
25:11He feels that he has no real role or meaning in what he does.
25:14It is a sick society
25:16This disease will kill him after many years.
25:18He will torment him during the period he lives
25:21His opinion was that we were also like Fighting Dogs
25:24We'll destroy this system.
25:25Nafura Awam Awam
25:26The one whose time is short and whose time is fast
25:28And you know
25:29Maybe, my dear, in the end
25:30When we finish talking about the td's manifold
25:32You'll find him a bit mischievous, if you notice.
25:34We'll feel like he's a mobile phone user and a troubled person.
25:36As is clear, it means
25:37But now we see his predictions for the world today.
25:39For example, I have a prediction that if society continues on the path it is currently on
25:42AI tools will appear to fill our place
25:44As long as this system isn't small, there will be tools more advanced than ours to do our job.
25:48Then we'll be able to do what we want locally.
25:49These tools are so advanced that they are exploited for our benefit.
25:51What matters is that we give it a sham, the advantage of making decisions instead of us.
25:55Because she's supposed to think faster and more efficiently
25:57And with time, gradually, just like what happened in the past.
25:59Society will become accustomed to this situation.
26:01At that point, any return to the original form will be impossible.
26:03Which is the decision that a person makes out of their own mind
26:06This would be tantamount to societal suicide.
26:08How do we fix your brain that hasn't been working for so long?
26:11Authority to make decisions
26:13Oh, you fool
26:13Oh you who left, my wish is to write you emails
26:15How will we hear the singing voices of your brain from lack of use?
26:19Then freedom collapses completely.
26:21I kept paying subscriptions, but
26:23This scenario, if it remains true
26:25We could reach a catastrophe
26:26A certain elite controls societies by possessing the most advanced AI.
26:30The AI that thinks with this efficiency reaches decisions that are not guaranteed
26:35For example, he eliminates the people around us who have no role in the system.
26:38If only this elite had been a little more merciful and hadn't listened to the AI.
26:40Here, humans will remain in the state of domesticated animals.
26:43Or, as Ted put it, we'll be living in a hateful, repulsive, and hateful society.
26:48From this we can understand the secret behind Ted's brutality and the crimes he committed.
26:51That's because he was obsessed with a much uglier mess.
26:54He is convinced that the current society is beyond reform.
26:56Or, as he put it, you can't handle a cake and keep it at the same time.
27:01To obtain something, one must sacrifice something else.
27:03Here, he meant the artificiality of nature versus technology.
27:07Ted Kaczynski, my dear, had a very strange journey
27:10From someone with a philosophy of sound, but he doesn't know how to reach people.
27:12He chose the most violent methods to convey a philosophy whose supposed purpose is noble.
27:16And even when he's accepted, he usually confesses to all his crimes and doesn't deny them.
27:19From life imprisonment until he was diagnosed with cancer in the prison hospital
27:22Ted Kaczynski lived his last days
27:24Until we reach June 10, 2023
27:26Ted is committing suicide
27:27He's committing suicide, my dear, with his shoelace inside his cell.
27:30After suffering from cancer and refusing to take any treatment for it
27:33Ted committed suicide; it was an unusual life for a very drunk person.
27:37Someone criticized the system that governs our entire lives.
27:39The system that has governed us from the day we were born until this very moment.
27:42The system that controls every detail of our day
27:45Ted chose the most disruptive method to tell you that what's happening is wrong.
27:48I don't need to tell you, my dear, that from this platform I am not at all in favor of Ted's views.
27:53And he certainly doesn't support his approach.
27:54His perceptions of the world are incomplete.
27:56incomplete perceptions
27:57But Quaha's observations are remarkably astute and intelligent, like Beckbrook's, if you think about it.
28:02Especially since all he presents is a small manifesto
28:04approximation, rough and theoretical
28:05It doesn't offer solutions as much as it points to a problem affecting a large segment of society.
28:09A society that can destroy human dignity, a person's sense of individuality and existence without them feeling anything.
28:14It's difficult to claim that Ted Klevinsky is a pretender or a fame seeker.
28:17That's right, because he implemented his ideas on himself before anyone else.
28:20He lived for about 30 years in an isolated place to implement these ideas.
28:23It's very difficult to sympathize with the criminal Salibeh who killed so many innocent people.
28:27But what's certain is that Ted's statement is difficult to die with.
28:29It's certain that he will remain and will be called upon for many things.
28:32Perhaps we can say in another way that he has reasonable expectations about what might happen.
28:36For example, using zakat funds for industrial purposes in extermination.
28:39Using advanced technology in cities
28:41Levels of mental health in modern cities
28:43This is in addition to the impact of technology on the environment.
28:45This will make every new generation feel that there is something true in what this man is saying.
28:50He might feel repelled by his story and the crimes.
28:52He might feel terrified by the accuracy of his predictions; predictions that came true to the end and followed their course will lead us to a future much worse than our present.
28:59That's all, my dear
29:00Whether it's good or not, I'll look at the life that's past, see the life to come, forget about looking at sources. If we're on YouTube, we'll subscribe.
29:04Channel
29:04That's all, my dear. See you later. Do you need anything?
29:08Sanya, my dear, please open the door.
29:14Is this the order I placed?
29:26Sanya, my dear, tell me so I can reach the knowledge
29:28Or because of the world
29:30music
29:36music
29:37music
29:40music
29:42music
29:45music
29:47music