- 9 hours ago
فسيلة - transplant
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
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
📚
LearningTranscript
00:27Translated by Nancy Qanqar
00:30What is this?
00:31Honestly, I want an apple, not a banana.
00:34Do you know why, sir?
00:35I chose to be a banana seller
00:37You definitely lost all your money at the marina.
00:38Tibet?
00:39By the way, I chose bananas because they are a very delicate fruit.
00:42Its fruit does not need to be washed
00:43Live by the seed
00:44It frowns easily
00:46It's also cheap
00:47Something royal
00:48Thank you very much for the presentation, but honestly, I went and bought apples.
00:55Believe me, bananas are good for you.
00:57Bananas are good for you
00:59I want apples because
01:00You
01:01You don't know what you want
01:03Companies and institutions tell you what you want
01:07What can I tell you? Apples
01:08What is it? I'll tell you, avocado.
01:11What is it? Let me tell you about the dragon fruit.
01:13And you
01:14Ammaa
01:16Ammaa
01:17And bananas in it
01:19The nose is in it, O Arabs
01:21They woke up
01:22The filth was your money
01:25Just, just, just, just
01:26What kind of financial filth is this, and what kind of Arabs are you, my country?
01:28Hey man, do a quick thing, man, steal it and buy it like that.
01:30Afra
01:32We are the pride of our time, by God!
01:34The approach aimed
01:35I am a traitor in front of you
01:37Okay, okay, okay, okay
01:38Bring two kilos of bananas
01:39I'm exhausted
01:40Sorry, sir, I didn't sell a kilo of fava beans today, so I'm disappointed.
01:42Never mind, never mind, it's a good thing
01:43Narrator
01:44My luck today is that I'm selling bananas.
01:46I'm sorry I accepted you, you traitor.
01:48What kind of work is this, we're selling it like this?
01:52better
01:52My country
02:01Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you.
02:02Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program
02:04In 1891, after the death of his father
02:07At the age of 14, Sam Zimori decides to flee Russia to avoid starving to death.
02:12He's trying his luck, like thousands of other immigrants in America.
02:14And there he moves between jobs, one after the other
02:17But my dear, after two years he'll encounter fruit being sold that he's never seen or heard of before.
02:22Dear fruit, beware, the moment will determine your fate.
02:24He is Abu Ahmed the Dragonfly
02:26Its name is Dragon Fruit, firstly, secondly
02:28I'm talking about bananas
02:29Beware, my dear, the fruit is the banana, which at that time had very few Americans.
02:33They beat him and knew what he looked like
02:35Abu Ahmed's bananas, and that's my dear, because at that time nothing could console him except the song.
02:38Because he needs to move from Latin America
02:41When someone said that Dad brought bananas, it was a real celebration.
02:43After my dear Sam, what the seller is squeezing
02:45Questions about where this fruit comes from
02:47And how does Zamrai get to the sidewalk?
02:49Mena Mobile's guy did Obama
02:50He prefers to sit like that, my dear, and watch the hatching.
02:53A shipment of bananas is coming from Jamaica
02:55This load will be sold by the company.
02:57Its name is United Fruits
02:58This is the company that has a monopoly, my dear.
03:01The banana trade is Zamrai Azizi, and he's sitting there sucking.
03:03He notices something strange and finds the company
03:05They sort the bananas into three piles
03:07The first pile is bananas in excellent condition.
03:08It can be shipped anywhere in America
03:11No matter how far away, because the banana is in the name of God.
03:13Wow, she still has time before I get ready.
03:15The second pile is in moderate condition.
03:16We barely manage to sell to the shops and vendors.
03:19The wanderers remained for an hour
03:20The third pile of bananas has started to turn slightly black.
03:22Yes, it's edible, but it doesn't reach any market.
03:25In time, in less than five days
03:26Hadhbouz, regarding the company, my dear
03:28In the absence of cooling technology
03:30This banana is worthless, but only to Zamurai.
03:33This was an opportunity because this man had been in Russia.
03:35Do you know what hunger means?
03:36He didn't understand how they could throw something away.
03:38It's still possible to eat it
03:39Come on, my dear, Sam Zamurai is going to buy
03:42One hundred and fifty dollars worth of bananas, with all my savings
03:45All the bananas he could afford
03:47What was going to be thrown away, my dear
03:48Leonted Fruits, that's a fake deal for them.
03:51Whoever buys these things is a fool
03:52Behem Zamurai somehow rents a car in Qatar
03:55To transport the bananas I bought
03:56They bet, my dear, that he is ahead of his time.
03:58He'll get off at every train stop and sell bananas.
04:01He earns $40, my dear
04:02That's equivalent to $14,000 now.
04:04Come on, my dear, this money isn't the real profit.
04:06The real gain is that he found a way
04:08He knows how to make money from fish.
04:11Zamurai found a way to vent
04:13United Fruits, which has its eye on green bananas.
04:15It's not a level that keeps deciding the process, my dear.
04:17Until he grows up and becomes a merchant
04:19He has a reputation, he'll sell it, my dear, in a year
04:211903 alone has more than half a million bananas
04:23Its time, my dear United Fruits
04:25He makes a deal with him, looking like a big shot.
04:27We will sell you all the following grade bananas
04:29In a way that ensures the sale of bananas, the company is confident of this.
04:31Without throwing it away, here's Zamurai
04:33He will buy from one source instead of negotiating.
04:35With the merchants, each one is a hypothetical.
04:37This is Deli, my dear. He abandoned the Zamurai he had.
04:39His picture is over 21 years old
04:41One hundred thousand dollars means he's a millionaire now.
04:43According to his timeline, the story is complete up to this point.
04:45Sweet God, inspiring young man, story
04:47The success of an underdog is traditional, but
04:49My dear, the source of the story is just beginning, Zamurai.
04:51His role won't end here, banana
04:53Delicious innocent fruit available
04:55All year round, children and adults alike are enjoying themselves.
04:57She's carrying one of the most
04:59Evil stories in the history of fruits
05:01Oh, Resoud Abu Hamad, you're right, Abu Hamad indeed.
05:03We don't always say bananas are evil.
05:05Because it's yellow inside
05:06All of us started, my dear, in 1871
05:09When the Costa Rican government asks
05:11American contractor Minor Cooperkeith
05:13He is building them a railway line.
05:15I feel that it connects the Creepy region
05:17In the forest, but my dear, there's nothing.
05:19It proceeded according to plan; there were four thousand workers.
05:21Costa Ricans die in the forests
05:23From scorpion stings and malaria
05:25So that in the end they can build forty kilometers of railway
05:27Before the project is completed
05:29After this number of people died
05:30The economy is in recession
05:32What a great thing that happened in America!
05:33At that point, Costa Rica won't be able to borrow.
05:35To pay Cooper, who is facing the specter of bankruptcy
05:38Cooper didn't know at the time that the cypress tree was under his feet
05:41Cypress tree in the damp forest soil
05:43Let me tell you, my dear, that bananas are in a slump.
05:45It was the duty of the poor workers
05:47They eat it to get energy and work
05:49This, my dear, is the same fruit.
05:51The one that was being followed in America at a high price
05:52Why, as we said, because of the transportation cost?
05:55Cooper thinks that if he finds a way
05:57Bananas are grown in large quantities
05:59He transports it quickly to distant markets before it spoils.
06:01Bananas can turn into gold.
06:03An hour, my dear Cooper, is about to make a deal with you, Starica.
06:06Aziz, this deal will save him from bankruptcy.
06:08Look, guys, I'm going to complete this train project.
06:10And he's not living on money
06:11But on the other hand, I have two very simple requests.
06:13I want the right to operate
06:15This line is for my account
06:17And I also want a larger plot of land than
06:19800,000 Fidam, dear, simple requests
06:21The year you were going to surpass
06:23Here, Cooper, my dear, will be training two birds with one stone.
06:25A large plot of land where a certain quantity of bananas can be grown
06:28And bottles that transport them quickly at a low cost
06:31And he, my dear, partners with two wholesalers.
06:33The British provide it with a distribution network for bananas all over America.
06:37He also has a zero-value base that opens up European markets for him.
06:40Dear customer, the company is called United Fruit.
06:42And then, my dear, nobody in America knew what a banana was.
06:452014
06:47There will be bananas in almost every American city.
06:50You can buy from anywhere
06:51Despite this, my dear, growing bananas was not an easy task.
06:54Because it has storms, floods, and heat waves.
06:57The way they grew their company was by overcoming these obstacles.
07:00It's simply about making me more bananas.
07:02Here we need to increase banana production
07:04This here means greater control over more land in Central America.
07:07Which were Spanish territories that gained their independence at the beginning of the 19th century
07:10The truth, my dear, is that America and Yonuts Fruit
07:13These countries were considered an extension of the United States of America.
07:16In broker's language, my dear, the garden of our unit
07:19They have already started taking more land in Costa Rica and a country like Panama.
07:24This is, of course, after the Indian farmers were removed.
07:26And when they started selling bananas at their cheap prices
07:28Identify small producers
07:29Producers who refused to give up their farms
07:32The company, my dear Votel, is expanding, expanding, expanding, expanding
07:38Which are the best lands in Central America?
07:41With the help of Khassam and with tax agreements, they don't get drunk or they don't work at all.
07:44Isn't that a foreign investor? Fadl Labasher
07:46The same thing is happening in Guatemala.
07:47Why is she also trying to work on the railway?
07:50Not all of them want to know that Guatemala's main resource is coffee.
07:53When the price of coffee collapsed, there was no money to pay.
07:56Who appears in 1903? Cooper
07:58Same deal
07:59Give us a break, guys, we'll make the developments for you, okay?
08:01But we'll take the right to operate the cat and plant bananas in it.
08:04Not only that, but Coach Cooper laughed.
08:06Cooper also took control of the main port and the Telegram channel.
08:09It starts, my dear United Fruit, imagine a fruit company
08:11My dear, their fleets will start to become larger than those of other countries.
08:14United Fruit's fleet reaches 115 ships
08:16By 1929
08:18When did its founder, Minor Cooper, die?
08:20This company will transform into an empire with more than 100,000 employees.
08:23One million two hundred thousand hectares of banana plantations
08:26United Fruit, which alone would represent three-quarters of the world's banana trade
08:31Give us, my dear, a simple summer that can take a continent
08:33In the novel Captjoz in Kings, which was published by Central in 1994
08:36American writer O. Henry imagines a country at the mercy of a fruit company.
08:40And Heske is the expression that has been associated with the Central American republics to this day.
08:45Over time, United Fruit became the dominant player in mail and shipment delivery in some Central American countries.
08:50So, my dear, it simply means that she will be able to hold any country that carries something it doesn't need.
08:54Or, for example, when workers go on strike against the company because of the extremely difficult working conditions under which they work.
08:58She, my dear, had complete control over people's shops, their homes, and the means of transportation they used.
09:05My dear, the workers didn't receive money, but coupons to buy their food, drink, and clothing.
09:11The idea is that these coupons should only be redeemed at stores owned by United Fruit.
09:17We need to implement a system of rationing in a fruit company so that American citizens can eat bananas. This system is what we call "fleets."
09:23Let's go back to Zamran, my friend. Remember the man we talked about earlier, the one who made the deal with United Fruit?
09:28To get the third-grade bananas, my dear, and not be satisfied with the deal, he decides to grow and export the bananas himself, and with the stallion he will establish
09:36With a partner who owns a company called Quemen Fruit
09:37This Sharaga will provide him with a fleet of ships and a hundred acres for banana cultivation. He has a head of state, and that was enough for United Fruit.
09:45Which is known in Central America as the Agataput
09:47In the Pablo, whose claws are currently being spread, there are no people, not even the countries themselves, that are being planted in it.
09:53banana
09:54My dear, she's destroying Zemurai's company, my dear, and the strange thing is that United Fruit isn't destroying Zemurai, God, they're letting him play in it.
10:01The market and this is not for the color of the homeland
10:03But it was a miscalculation on Zemurai's part that the United States government decided to apply an antitrust law to United Fruit.
10:10You, a big company, can't monopolize the market; you need competitors. Tom United Fruit is a great example of this. Wow!
10:16I have a competitor, he is a competitor named Sam Zemurray, he is my competitor
10:20Of course, my dear, he worked with them before, so they know him, remember him, and understand him. So, please, be there.
10:26Play this way so we can compete with the government, my friend, and thus refute the accusation of monopoly.
10:31Zemurai, my dear, his appetite for expansion is insatiable. One day he'll leave America and travel to live in Honduras, and that gives him an advantage over the big company.
10:38The flabby one that a few of his businessmen manage in glass offices in America
10:41People who know nothing about the nature of sesame cultivation and the working conditions of its laborers
10:44Zimurai Biot's relationship with Honduran government officials involves bribing them to exempt him from paying taxes or fees on loans and exports.
10:52He starts by buying more land at rock-bottom prices and increasing his business.
10:57Although the wages were low, they were better than the wages of Unite Fruit workers.
11:02Dunia Azizi, everything is going perfectly, just like in the movie, but then a problem arises, and you put dreams in Zimurai.
11:06Why is Honduras borrowing $100 million from Britain? Because of a railway project.
11:12Honduras, from Qan Saatasher, wants to build a railway.
11:15What's happening, my dear, is that the issue is voluntary, and Britain is threatening Honduras that if it doesn't pay what it owes, they will take it.
11:20Here, dear BBJP Morgan, the banker, at the request of the US government
11:25He's offering Honduras a deal: "Look, everyone, I'm a financial institution. I'm going to offer to pay off your debts to the British."
11:31God, you're so kind! Oh, Mr. J.P. Morgan, I never wished you anything bad. Thank you!
11:35He hasn't finished anything yet.
11:36We told you in return that I want to have the right to collect taxes on all state resources.
11:42And I won't let Britain occupy you? I'll let Britain occupy you.
11:45Of course, my dear, this might be a bit good for the Indians.
11:47Because at least someone will protect it from someone else coming and occupying it.
11:50Hazel is hers, of course, but he will protect her.
11:52But this means that Zamurai has lost its tax exemption privileges.
11:55Which gave it a competitive advantage over United Fruit Company
11:59Here, Zamurai isn't just talking; he's a publicity stunt.
12:02His goal, my dear, is to provoke the anger of the Honduran people.
12:06Not just against his government, but against the American government itself.
12:09Not only that, my dear
12:10He will start funding an army of mercenaries with money and weapons to overthrow the Honduran government.
12:16He's going to stage a coup, my dear.
12:18And he will succeed, my dear, and Zamurai will appoint a new prime minister, and Manuel Bonilla will be his successor.
12:23Whoever gets up and kneels will receive all the privileges and a kiss.
12:26And more land
12:27Here, Unite Al-Frut sees this and takes my belt, Shahd.
12:30Governments' plans
12:30At that time, my dear, Beddakhd Zamurai and Unite the Fruit will wage war where everything is permissible.
12:35Mousse with milk, fruit, prayer, Farghali, inside with mango
12:38It means the world is messed up
12:39They start, my dear, to encroach upon some of the railways that transport goods.
12:42They begin to change the course of the rivers that irrigate the banana plantations.
12:45At that point, my dear, he began to fill his ships with ammunition and weapons.
12:49My dear, this situation will continue like this until the American government intervenes and says...
12:53And my caravan, you son of a gun
12:54You are harming the interests and image of the United States.
12:56Oh please, not the picture.
12:58At that time, my dear, the United States alone would be the sole source of optimism for both sides.
13:01And the two of them merge and remain as one.
13:04And after she was chasing United Fruit with contempt, you call them monopolists and monsters.
13:08You're the only company that controls the prices, you monster!
13:11You're saying "Ya Lala"? What am I saying?
13:12You're monopolizing it now, and that's the real headache.
13:14Huh?
13:14Of course, my dear Zamurai agrees to the blood deal.
13:17United Fruit stipulates to Zamurai
13:19He is stepping down and declaring that he has no connection whatsoever to the company's capabilities.
13:23Zamurai, my dear, agrees, I told her.
13:25What's wrong with this man, Abu Hamid? He forgives and agrees to everything.
13:27This is called coups because of bananas
13:30He's just being lenient with them.
13:31Hey, my dear, you're so kind, you're now a grocer selling eggs.
13:34United Fruit is trading this guy for $30 million worth of shares.
13:39Wait, wait
13:41That's equivalent to half a billion dollars today.
13:44Huh?
13:45The itinerant fruit vendor who came from Russia couldn't find food
13:49Wajih here is trying to make a living selling bananas
13:52He remained one of the richest men in America
13:54United Fruit's largest shareholder
13:56Did you see how bananas work miracles?
13:591928 United Fruit workers in Columbia
14:02They rebel against the brutal working conditions they are attached to.
14:05They are organizing a strike in which thousands of workers will participate.
14:08So that, my dear, they can convince the company to accept their demands.
14:11Which simply means that they take one day off per week.
14:14Huh? That's Tsain
14:15And they say that if it doesn't contain any rudeness
14:17They take their money, why the communes?
14:19for him?
14:20Of course, my dear United Fruit, you put pressure on the Colombian government.
14:22The US government wants this strike broken up by force.
14:25The Colombian army opens the river to the strikers.
14:28And how many thousands of workers will die?
14:30My dear, the rosary is still known today as the banana rosary.
14:33This became a turning point in the history of Colombia and the history of Central America.
14:36My dear Zamurai, who has begun to enjoy his retirement
14:38The man who wore only a galabiya and sat in the king's chair, enjoying his tea.
14:41He takes his pension, which is sufficient for him.
14:42He began to realize that this was... (sorry)
14:44The pension is no longer in millions.
14:46Millions remained, minus fractions.
14:47After the company achieved profits of $45 million in 1928
14:52In 1932, it dropped to $6 million.
14:56Here, Zamurai shook off
14:57The company's stock, which was priced at $100, is now worth ten dollars.
15:01This was disastrous news for Zamurai, who had spent his entire life at this company.
15:04My dear friend immediately begins to study what happened.
15:06He discovers a series of mistakes the company made.
15:09And thus I was led to the loss.
15:10And he sends a message when he reads Unite Seron
15:12He tells them about the problems and tells them the solutions.
15:14But they, my dear, are throwing him away
15:16He sent it and there was no reply.
15:17When he decides that he wants to attend the board meeting
15:19They treat him like a madman
15:20I'm telling him to get out.
15:21and the company's CEO
15:22Petari with a Russian accent
15:23The meeting informs them of the details of their livelihood.
15:25Of course, they think that this man surrendered after a few days.
15:28They find the men of Zamurai for him.
15:29This time there's a Duchanta
15:31What's in it?
15:31Votes of other shareholders
15:33This man went and met with the other shareholders.
15:34Convince them with data and figures.
15:36From the current administration
15:37drowning her
15:38Zamurai is throwing a barrage of votes at the board of directors.
15:40This mass of sounds exceeds fifty in the water
15:43Therefore, it is managed by the right of management.
15:44And he looks, my dear, at the CEO
15:46He tells him, "You are rejected."
15:47At an age, my dear
15:4856 years old
15:49Zmurai, the simple young Russian
15:51The one who started with a simple beginning
15:52He remains the president of United Fruit
15:53He remained one of the most powerful men in America.
15:55The Unexpected Banana King
15:57One of the magazines describes what happened in a headline
15:59Jonah who swallowed the whale
16:00He can, my dear Zamurai, step by step
16:02The company owes its glory and enormous profits
16:04But you are a deviant.
16:05Financial empires
16:07It was no use standing still.
16:07If it stops expanding, it dies.
16:09And Zamurai, who started his story
16:10Underdog is the weakest link in the whale's path.
16:12He remained the same whale
16:13His ambition to expand never stops
16:15Except for World War II
16:16International trade is at a standstill
16:25The advertising pioneer we talked about
16:27In the propaganda circle
16:28Edward Bernice
16:29My dear friend, this is a close friend of Feroid.
16:31This major is dear to me
16:32It leads to ingenious marketing strategies.
16:34So that it makes something like a banana
16:36American symbol
16:37Although he wasn't originally from America
16:38He delivers bananas to mothers at home
16:40As a breakfast staple
16:41meaningful duty
16:42It contains vitamins and potassium
16:44Doctors answer
16:44Because he swore on the Quran
16:45And Bernice, whose show you won't finish
16:47He sacrifices
16:47He provides mothers with recipes for cooking bananas
16:50Dear carrier, you succeed to the American level
16:52They can't imagine their lives without bananas
16:54Especially with the emergence of the character
16:55Chiquita Banana Cartoon
16:57Banana beauty queen
16:58The song that haunts the American citizen everywhere
17:01Radio
17:01and television screens
17:02We cool her voice
17:03Her promises, the old man
17:04It was exactly
17:05And he resembled a star of her time
17:05Carmen Miranda
17:06Brazilian artist
17:07The one famous for her heads
17:08This is its distinctive mark
17:10Burnitut mixed fruit
17:11Tutti Frutti
17:12For my dear life
17:13This was no coincidence
17:14Carmen Miranda
17:14It represented South America
17:16United States of America
17:18Where she imagined it
17:19Fateful and strange
17:20And you might feel that it's within his reach.
17:21But still
17:22Far away and a blink
17:23In the world of legal issues
17:24For the banana beauty queen
17:25Bananas must be ripe
17:26It tastes and looks the same
17:27The only Smurf costume
17:28What the company produces
17:28The Grossmichel
17:29This is a type of banana similar to
17:30Cavendish banana
17:31What we eat for the time
17:32That was delicious, my dear.
17:33His skin is thicker
17:34So it becomes easier to transport it.
17:35But grafted agriculture
17:37For one type
17:37You put it in the farms
17:38Bananas, my dear
17:39The one who remains demanding prunes
17:40Some of them resemble each other, like bananas.
17:42The second version remains the safest
17:43It is very easy for it to spread in it
17:45epidemics
17:45Diseases are transmitted
17:46From one banana plantation to the next
17:48And then exactly what happened
17:49Mirror costume
17:49In order to address this problem
17:50Birch was tons
17:52From insect-borne mobile phones
17:53More than 30 times a year
17:55Let me tell you, my dear
17:56The local population
17:57They lost their sense of smell
17:58And the toxins carried by the wind
18:00Their skin turned blue
18:01And of course
18:02Many workers died
18:03And the Greeks flee
18:03I entered on their behalf
18:13And of course
18:13Should we move and fix it?
18:14no
18:14So why don't we build on something new?
18:15This will happen over time.
18:16Khalez Maraya
18:17He buys more land
18:18Who plants it?
18:18Because when it is planted, it is destroyed
18:20The day of transfer to the next
18:21Let me tell you, my dear
18:22In the year 1940
18:23United Fruit
18:24Acquiring the text
18:26agricultural lands
18:27In Honduras
18:28Text of state agricultural lands
18:29Not a city
18:30Not a village
18:31A company's country
18:32American company
18:32The strange thing is
18:33The text of the lands of D
18:34Not planted from it
18:35Only 10%
18:36All these strategies
18:37and precautions
18:38It did not stop the risk of diseases
18:40The one who determines
18:41fragile fruit
18:41From the way they used to plant
18:43banana-like
18:43Over time
18:44One by one
18:44United Fruit Empire
18:46She too was afflicted with the disease
18:47And it started to ooze from inside
18:48And headed by Shakita Banana
18:50You won't be able to hide the truth for long.
18:511944
18:52A revolution is taking place in Guatemala
18:54And it overthrows the dictator's rule.
18:55And my best friend
18:57United Fruit Company
18:58The man who believed in forced labor for the paragraph
19:00And at the lowest possible wages
19:02In 1951
19:03A guy named Jacob Warbenz arrives
19:05Through democratic elections of power
19:06The first promise of the revolution is being fulfilled.
19:08What are we going to do?
19:09We want to implement agricultural reform.
19:10We will now take the lands of the big landowners
19:12We distribute them to small farmers
19:14Which of course is based on shares of
19:15United Fruit
19:16Which over time came to own more than two-thirds
19:19Agricultural lands in Guatemala
19:21At a time, my dear
19:22Two-thirds of the population live below the poverty line.
19:23Petegri Arbenez on the Octopus Wave
19:26United Fruit
19:27And one day a decree was issued
19:28He confiscates and takes hundreds of thousands of hectares
19:31United Fruit didn't even grow it in the first place.
19:33But that's how it is.
19:34Reserve
19:35I want to tell you, my dear
19:35The Earth's population was tens of millions
19:37Fruit, my dear
19:38United Fruit is making a great move
19:40She was valuing the land at lower figures.
19:42So that you don't incur too many taxes
19:43Arbeniz Amalom, sweet and strong
19:45Very nice
19:45The lands that we are in now, with the nuko
19:47Hindikoa, opposite her, has become accustomed.
19:48With the money that you used to put in the contracts
19:50Not at its true value, which could reach tens of millions.
19:53No, not with the money you put on the food.
19:55Therefore, you are paying taxes on it.
19:57my darling
19:57This was the first time I'd ever challenged United Fruit in this way
20:00And this time, like a breeze
20:01He didn't have mercenaries to carry out a coup.
20:03That's why he's going to his friend's house.
20:05Edward Bernays
20:06Ayumi Azizi, with the help of Edward Bernays
20:08Campaign worker for the devilish president of Guatemala
20:11We'll go to social media
20:12To promote this man's reputation
20:14For the United States government
20:16and the people of the United States
20:17This issue will attempt to become a matter of public opinion in America.
20:20He will be photographed by the President of Guatemala
20:21It is allied with the Soviet Union
20:23Herscot, you filthy thing
20:24And it is part of the communist threat
20:26The one who threatens America and the free world
20:27Oh time
20:28He'll come up with some sweet, stimulating newspaper headlines.
20:31To the newspaper owners who are running away from him
20:32It links communism and bananas
20:34Rami, my dear, this isn't life.
20:36However, America, which was experiencing the Cold War,
20:38She's very prepared; she'll swallow Bernice elevators.
20:40Believe in the communism and banana thing.
20:431952
20:45Eisenhower is elected President of the United States of America
20:48America's policy for two
20:50He relied on containing communism with wisdom and reason.
20:52Eisenhower's Wisdom and Field Affairs
20:54He's not with him.
20:55He's coming to attack and train
20:56He puts two brothers in important positions.
20:58John Vasta Dulles, Secretary of State
21:00And Allen Dulles as Director of Tourism
21:02What? What's the importance of these two in the story?
21:04Both of them, my dear, were legal advisors.
21:06At United Fruit Company
21:08And it's not just them, my dear.
21:09Also, the US ambassador to the United Nations
21:11In January, Kabut Lodsh
21:12And he was a loyal member of a lobbying group working for the company's interests.
21:16Because his family is one of its major shareholders
21:18All countries were ready to convert Bernice's propaganda
21:21A plan adopted by the government of the most powerful country in the world
21:25In August 1953
21:26The American intelligence agency that Allen Dulles is hiding
21:29Eisenhower's policy of attack is being implemented
21:31The government of Mohammad Mosaddegh in Iran is rising up and protecting it.
21:33democratically elected government
21:35Why? Because this man is the mother of American oil companies.
21:38So, you're above all this talk about democracy.
21:39We'll bring someone
21:40Aizan Hauer, when he found what this was
21:41It became clear that the coup would succeed thanks to the youth and their tricks.
21:43Hey guys, why don't we stage the same coup in Guatemala?
21:46Okay, who's with me?
21:47Then rest, my dear
21:48The CIA selects Colonel Castillo Armas
21:51They put him at the head of an army of rebels.
21:53An army is arriving in Guatemala aboard a fleet of boats.
21:56United Fruit
21:57He uses its farms as bases for his operations.
21:59And in June 1954, the capital was bombed
22:01The second city lies in rebel hands.
22:04My dear friend, no one is forcing Arbenz to resign in a radio address.
22:08Who is responsible for all this disaster?
22:10octopus
22:10United Fruit
22:11Armas
22:11The one who became president of Guatemala with the support of the United States of America
22:15United Fruit Company
22:16He cancels all decisions of the Arbenz government
22:18United Fruit will return all the lands that were unjustly taken from it.
22:22The land, my dear, will return
22:23But stability and security won't return.
22:25Especially after the arrest, detention, and killing of the workers' leaders
22:29Let me tell you, my dear, that Guatemala is heading towards a civil war.
22:33It continues until 1996
22:36Black River
22:37Yalla, a war, my dear, will claim 100,000 lives.
22:39We see a million displaced people and tens of thousands of missing persons.
22:43Mayan Indian tribes in Guatemala
22:45You will be subjected to genocide
22:47United Fruit, which prevented any possible reform in Guatemala
22:49To protect its image and interests
22:51It will be the epicenter of the anger of the peoples of Central America
22:54In January 1959
22:56In Castro Pistole seizes power in Cuba
22:59The pro-US regime of Batista is overthrown
23:02Che Guevara, a companion of Del Castro, in his photograph
23:04He happened to be in Guatemala at the time of the coup.
23:07And it is said, my dear, that this is the moment the rebel tried.
23:10I no longer believe in the idea that we can fix things one by one.
23:13Gradual reform is above you.
23:14We need to create a complete picture
23:15In 1960, Castro targeted all American companies.
23:19And who is at the top of it?
23:20Fruit Unit
23:20This time, Zemurray and Bernice stand helpless, unable to do anything.
23:24A year later, Zamurai, the banana king, dies.
23:26And with time, his empire didn't last long after him.
23:29The name Unit Fruit is starting to disappear
23:31After several acquisitions and several mergers
23:33And its name begins to change to Chiquita.
23:36When they discovered that the name Unit Al-Frut was associated with wars, coups, and massacres
23:40And the workers who are arrested
23:42This company's name has failed completely.
23:43Also in the late sixties
23:45Diseases destroy the type of bananas it produces.
23:47Which is Gross Mikkel
23:48A new type will replace it in the markets.
23:50The type we know today as Cavendish
23:53This will be developed by a company called Dole.
23:55Which will eventually become the new king of the banana company market
23:58But according to the latest reports
23:59Let me tell you that Cavendish bananas are also threatened with being taken out of the market
24:03Because it is also threatened by diseases that could kill it
24:06The first thing you say is, "I want to produce a stable quality banana."
24:09I want to be like McDonald's in Korea, with the same taste.
24:12And in Egypt, the same taste
24:13And in Europe, the same taste
24:14This is another way that could eliminate him
24:16Because as long as you're similar
24:18No variety, no differences
24:19It's very easy for this number to come and finish off its type.
24:21Now, my dear, back to Chiquita and the Unit Fruit Company
24:24She recently admitted that she paid $2 million to armed militias in Colombia.
24:29It's as if the same story is being repeated.
24:30But this time under different names
24:32But my dear, let's ask you, Suhail.
24:33Is this the only angle from which we can see this story?
24:36Is it possible for someone to see it from another angle?
24:38In 2017
24:40Professor Broz Gilli will publish
24:42A controversial paper entitled
24:44The Case for Colonialism
24:46Meaning, folks, we've spent our whole lives criticizing colonialism.
24:50And those foreign countries came to the poor countries and did it
24:53Is it possible that there is no benefit in what the colonial powers do in poor and weak countries?
24:57Broz says that colonialism, despite all its problems
24:59However, it helped to modernize the colonies.
25:02And it created the basis for some of these countries to remain independent states, and sometimes a marriage
25:06Now
25:06If you think about it, my dear, you'll find that many researchers consider the French campaign, for example
25:10Just like it came with cannons and occupation
25:12It came through printing presses and culture
25:13Which brought about a transformation for Egypt in modern times
25:16Likewise, the need for railways
25:18Which connected a vast country like India
25:19The credit for this communication goes to British colonialism.
25:22This is, of course, according to what he said; I'm just conveying his point of view.
25:24If we apply Professor Gilly's words
25:26You'll find that United Fruit is not an exception.
25:28This is one of the world's first multinational companies.
25:32One of the first multinational
25:34Company Z is one of dozens of multinational companies that came after it.
25:37I was able to build the highly successful Best Smoodle
25:39It improves the quality of local infrastructure and facilities.
25:42And transportation to spread across the country
25:44I developed and improved farming methods.
25:46Without United Fruit, the world wouldn't have known bananas.
25:49And it was not available in large quantities and at cheaper prices.
25:51Today, bananas are considered the fourth largest food source in the world.
25:54Of course, like Tsena, this is what she said and she'll die and reply
25:56The truth is that there are researchers who have responded to Professor Gilly's statement.
26:00He will tell you the problem lies in the images of colonialism
26:02If he's making improvements, it will look good.
26:04But in reality, it only serves him.
26:06For example, the railways in India
26:07Ah, terrible invention and connecting India to itself
26:10Amazing today
26:11But why did the Englishman do it in the first place?
26:13So that the forces can move quickly
26:15Because there's no picture here, we'll go and suppress it.
26:16If there's a protest here, we'll go and suppress it.
26:19And the goods that will be made in India, we will take them and quickly export them to Britain and Europe.
26:23And while India, which some are predicting
26:25It will be the largest economy by 2030
26:27This is not thanks to colonialism.
26:28Colonialism, which India was under for so long
26:31India was one of the poorest countries in the world.
26:33And again, my dear, if the condition is the episode on the invasion of India
26:34You will learn that India was susceptible to colonization.
26:36One of the richest countries in the world
26:38Had it not been for colonialism, India might have been more successful.
26:40I am issuing here of course a richness in the sense of the local total output
26:43What's inside the individual means
26:44And people imagine that if it weren't for that, colonization would have happened
26:47The Indian killer married a Bandari man
26:48There's fruit, my dear, that she created a business model that benefits her.
26:51To maximize shareholder profits
26:53As described by the Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez
26:56One Hundred Years of Solitude
26:57The banana company changed the pattern of opinion
26:59The harvest cycle accelerated and brought with it modernization.
27:01But it also brought dictatorship.
27:03When Thabit left the country in a state of ruin
27:05Bruce Gilly's study will spark controversy
27:07Because he will say that the solution lies with some of the failing countries of the South.
27:09It is old colonialism
27:11A great nation that will be reshaped from scratch
27:13Its ability to oversee its economy
27:14And despite, my dear, some people say that he apologized.
27:17However, we can say that colonialism is still happening to this day.
27:19But it remained not in the form of armies.
27:21And governments that control
27:22But in the form of companies
27:24In a study of 12 years of age in 2023
27:25Titled
27:28Multinational corporations
27:30So far, it tends to break ethical rules.
27:33The issue exists, but in different forms.
27:35In his book
27:38Vetter Chapin says
27:39Unleashing the multinational
27:41Without controlling them
27:42Sometimes influence transcends countries and governments.
27:45It could transform the entire world
27:47For the Republics of Noz
27:48This makes a company like Unitit Fruit
27:49Much more than just a historical tale
27:52And despite the fact that her story is over
27:53However, her legacy may still exist.
27:55It might still exist
27:56But in the form of other companies
27:57But seriously, my dear
27:58Last but not least
27:59What you saw in the last episode
28:00You will see it in the next episode
28:00Let's look at the sources we have on YouTube
28:02Subscribe to the channel
28:02Do you know, my dear, how many days ago
28:03Trifoni found Perin
28:04I opened it and found a private number
28:06Do you know who I am?
28:07Unitit Fruit Company
28:08She wanted me to make a promotional poster for them.
28:10Their height, I'll tell you what
28:11I would never do that.
28:13impossible
28:14Of course, my dear
28:15Not just my role in the advertising campaign
28:17But I will kill my whole family
28:19Not because I refused
28:20But because I said "the joke"
28:21This is the truth