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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
00:12Jojo
00:12Look what I found?
00:15What is this?
00:15What's this "Bogo" thing with the "Duck" in it? I don't know.
00:19See how it shines? A very strange stone.
00:22It's like a piece of the sun
00:24Is this stone more important than all the other stones?
00:27almost
00:28And what's with all this? I haven't seen anything like it before.
00:30So why don't you give it to me like that?
00:31no
00:32no
00:33Why, my son?
00:34This is a stone, meaning it has no value.
00:35Do you know someone who truly has a mother?
00:37Black?
00:37Do you know how to eat this stone?
00:41You're right
00:43It really doesn't get crushed
00:44But Haddi might test him.
00:46This is something that has a certain value; it must be eaten.
00:49Do you see how it's shining?
00:50So what do we do with it?
00:51I don't know, but we have to hide it
00:53So that no one from the tribe would covet it.
00:55And whoever wants it, you can give them a piece of it in exchange for something.
00:58Do you mean we should replace a piece of this sunstone?
01:01Do you eat?
01:03Food, women, animals, and humans
01:07Everything
01:09Medicine and illusion
01:10Why would they accept that?
01:11We are living in the Stone Age.
01:12All new ideas now
01:15We are experimenting
01:16okay
01:17Let's go
01:18What is this?
01:19What's behind you?
01:21What is this? Where is it?
01:22any
01:27Sorry, Bojo
01:28Look at our melting sunstone
01:30The idea of replacing it with other things is a good idea.
01:34It will be my idea
01:35Maybe I should give this silly Rahmat a piece
01:37So let's move past that.
01:39I hope you will bring this idea to her attention.
01:50I want to always keep my viewers healthy and blessed, and I'm happy to have you in a new episode of the Al-Daheeh program.
01:54Listen carefully to this episode, my dear, because it contains words of wisdom.
01:58Da da da da da da da da da da dahab
02:00No, Abu Hamad, I want to tell you, may God grant you success in your endeavors.
02:02But I can't see it
02:04May God help those who are waiting for you.
02:05My dear, I'm trying to get you to wear a gold ring.
02:07Let my dear, I'll take your hand and we'll go to March 4, 1519
02:10We'll go together to the Mexican beaches that appear nearby
02:14Eleven ships
02:15Eleven ships
02:16Carrying hundreds of Spanish soldiers
02:18They are led by the colonizer or explorer
02:21It depends on whether you stop the water or continue drinking.
02:23Hernan Cortes
02:24The man who is just like all Europeans
02:26He used to hear legends about the New World
02:28The favoritism that is full of gold acting
02:31And the cities that he built are made of gold.
02:34And the people of Astix, who are blessed with gold for lunch and dinner
02:37My dear uncle, someone eats three times as much gold and his name is Astik
02:40But the dear European man heard this, bought it, and went off with it.
02:43So he decided to leave his job, with the paperwork in front of him, and say to him, in a colonial manner.
02:46And this, my dear, is exactly for pregnant women with Cortisol.
02:48But the surprise was that when he arrived in the capital of the Astics
02:50No, my dear, there's plenty of gold.
02:52But it has no economic value.
02:56The Astic and Mayan peoples viewed gold as having spiritual value.
02:59They saw it as representing the blood of the sun and the adornment of the gods.
03:02To realize that one of the Spanish monks would say later
03:05Their gold was for the soul, but ours was for the stomach.
03:08So the colonizer sees this and understands, and says to him, "You have a spirit, may God preserve it for you."
03:12But I am Maznov in Goshtin
03:13Europe, my dear, is covered in gold, just like you and me.
03:16Here I tell you that in Europe from the 12th century to the 17th century
03:19They were very interested in what is known as quantum alchemy.
03:22And this, my dear, is a branch of natural philosophy.
03:24One of the views of this science is that we can transform any metal into gold.
03:28Alchemy was influenced by the ideas of the philosopher Aristotle.
03:30Aristotle said that everything was created from the four elements.
03:33Earth, water, space, and fire
03:35Therefore, since all metals are made of the same material
03:38The materials are the same; we can manipulate the proportions of the materials that make up any metal.
03:41And then we can make gold from any metal.
03:44This idea, my dear, although it seems fantastical, mythical, and reminiscent of Pablo Coelho's work
03:49But it is an idea that is of interest to prominent Muslim scholars.
03:52For example, someone like Jabir ibn Hayyan or al-Razi
03:54And countries when their books were translated into European languages
03:57Ahuba carried it as a true science, a prestigious science.
04:00Alchemy, my dear, was being treated with great anesthesia.
04:03To such an extent that scientists of Isaac Newton's stature studied it and spoke about it with utmost seriousness.
04:08It is said that he wrote about it in about a million words
04:10In the eyes of the people, alchemy was a revered science.
04:13We see the alchemist standing majestically in the midst of his work.
04:15He is following the gold experiments
04:17We see this in paintings like William FitzDoggles' The Alchemist
04:20And Ahmed, don't take me for granted.
04:22But this idea seems fanciful, childish, and simplistic to me.
04:26But I don't want to say that so I don't sound like I'm being vague.
04:27And embarrassment to the workers whose names you mentioned
04:29The sweet, advanced Europe that has Schengen
04:32Holding on to her dearly, holding on tight
04:34Honestly, my dear, the answer is simple: Mustafa Al-Agha on MBC.
04:37The truth is, it wasn't scientific curiosity, but rather...
04:40Which is not possible, but God willing, it will be true, and between the centuries
04:45The sixteenth and eighteenth groups were defined by many battles and ongoing wars.
04:49Alchemy presented a fantastical idea, but it was somewhat of a lifesaver.
04:52Experiments in a laboratory can provide you with a quick solution, a solution we can use.
04:57We will use it to wage wars and end famines, of course, my dear.
05:00You don't need to stand with Ashraf Ibrahim for him to tell you that if this happens
05:03It would be a disaster. I told you this story in 2014 when I was feeling
05:07Go back and watch, my dear, the inflation episode from the early episodes of the Al-Daheeh program.
05:11When Al-Daheeh was serious
05:12My dear, you reminded me of the good old days.
05:14What's this, Abu Hamad? Those were the good old days! You were an electron!
05:17My dear, if you don't have a lot of gold, the gold will lose its value.
05:20It will then be a free-for-all for anyone who has it and anyone who can spend it
05:23The idea is based on the concept of freshness.
05:26The idea is in the bank, not on the paper.
05:28My dear, the Europeans didn't know this.
05:30For example, are there any sources that speak optimistically about one of the alchemists?
05:33Johann Friedrich Böttger
05:35The alchemist, thank God
05:37He claims that gold is made in a factory.
05:39It was important to use the treasury by the prince himself.
05:41God, Abu Ahmad, you mean they know how gold is made in a factory?
05:44I could go into science now!
05:45Open the doors of the house
05:47And I still don't need to get a ring.
05:49I'm going too far, Abu Ahmed. Tell me the secret quickly, tell me how to do it.
05:51My dear, I'd like to let him tell you that, initially, I'm like this.
05:54Millions of people watch me every week on YouTube.
05:56If there's a way I know
05:58Believe me, I won't say it.
05:59If there's something I know and have said
06:01Millions knew
06:02This, my dear, is not Thursday's bechamel.
06:04This, my dear, is the first piece of bad news.
06:05The second monster news
06:07Johann Friedrich Böttger
06:08He couldn't manufacture it anymore with his own hands.
06:10Just as he, the prince, and you wished
06:12Rather, it is you who experienced his initial trials by chance.
06:16What is known as porcelain
06:17Of course it will work in marriage
06:19But how does the gold kiosk project work?
06:21Here, my dear, we can say
06:22Alchemy is a history of attempts at truth
06:24Attempts driven by wishes and myths
06:26We see the pinnacle of these myths in the myth of the philosopher's stone.
06:30De Flosfer Stone
06:31Alchemists consider it to be the tool
06:33Those who can try to go with me to Dahab
06:35Of course, my dear philosopher's stone
06:36It did not appear at any subsequent stage in history.
06:38Otherwise, you would have found gold shops.
06:41Are you selling a philosopher's stone?
06:42In the same stand as Spike and Janhat, BT Safe
06:44The only philosopher's stone currently available on the market
06:47The first part of Harry Potter
06:48Available in bookstores and on DVD.
06:49Get rid of the pressure and sleep
06:51Don't dream about these things again.
06:52But my dear, although the philosopher's stone is a legend
06:54That didn't actually happen.
06:55However, it reveals a very strong human fascination with gold.
06:58Humans, my dear, and especially the central bank and your protectors
07:01They love gold very, very much
07:03They feel safe in his presence
07:04Humans love gold very much
07:06Whether as a currency you can buy anything with
07:07Or as a unique type of mineral
07:09The most perfect of all metals
07:10Humans also sometimes viewed gold as a sacred element.
07:14An element that can be transformed into an elixir that cures diseases
07:17It also gives its owner spiritual enlightenment.
07:19Of course, my dear, I think Kanas watches the Al-Daheeh program.
07:22It's difficult, my dear, in our time to be convinced by ideas
07:24Like the philosopher's need and the experiments of alchemy
07:26But what if I told you and surprised you?
07:27Most of our modern sciences
07:29Physics, Chemistry, and Economics
07:31Even evolutionary psychology
07:33They all confirm the same assertion as the alchemists.
07:36Gold is also a unique metal.
07:38But without any myths
07:40Come, my dear, let's imagine together a scene of my grandfather and yours.
07:44First human
07:45Create, my dear, the first person in history to see gold.
07:48What might have been the first thing that attracted him to her?
07:49Of course, Abu Ahmed, no problem.
07:51Bravo, my dear
07:52Is Abu Ahmed really that easy?
07:53Yes, my dear, it's easy, let's continue.
07:54The first thing about gold jewelry is that it has no meaning.
07:55This can be seen in the origin of the word gold in Latin.
07:58The Latin word for gold is "orm".
08:00A word of very old origin
08:02The word literally means bright dawn or shining light.
08:05It was as if ancient man, upon first seeing pieces of gold, was in front of him
08:08Al-Satin and Al-Tarab
08:09They didn't see it; it was just ordinary metal.
08:11This is because she has a sense that it is something sacred.
08:12A treasure from another world
08:13It's not at all surprising that people are obsessed with this shiny metal.
08:17From their first meeting
08:18And that, my dear, is something strange.
08:19Why do we even like shiny things?
08:21In 2014, the massive study was published in the journal
08:24Of Consumer Psychology
08:25Which is considered one of the most important magazines in the field of consumer behavior
08:28In this study, they conducted a series of experiments on people of different backgrounds.
08:31So they can see if our love is for things that shine
08:34These are things we learned over time
08:35We saw it in our parents
08:36We start to imitate her
08:37And we are actually born with this desire
08:39In the first experiment, they showed people leaflets that looked similar
08:42But the text of these publications was printed on glossy paper.
08:45The second text is on matte paper.
08:47They asked people to share the posts according to whichever one they liked best.
08:51The result was clear
08:52Most people chose the posts that looked shiny.
08:54At that point, the researchers said that the participants in the experiment might have chosen it.
08:57Because people are already used to seeing things that shine.
09:00Although it is expensive or chic
09:01That's why in the next experiment they went to young children
09:04Ayal 4-5 years old, they haven't seen kindergarten
09:06They haven't gotten used to anything yet.
09:08Show them some pictures
09:09One half is on glossy paper and the other half is on matte paper.
09:12The result was that the children chose the loyalty that shone.
09:15At that point, they wanted to know if there was an internal link.
09:18Between shine and water, for example
09:20The water is shining, and we need water to live.
09:22For example
09:23The link is here
09:24My dear, you're shining
09:25It's like gold
09:26It's like this
09:27It shines from its outside
09:28They made it difficult from within
09:29The experiment wanted to see if our basic need was for water
09:32It might be what makes us attracted to gold.
09:34And the ruling on your participation in the shine
09:36So they went and got pictures of natural landscapes
09:38The text of these views includes lakes.
09:39The second text contains images of desert landscapes.
09:41They asked people, "Which picture do you see that shines more?"
09:43And people chose the pictures that had water in them.
09:46Although all the images were of the same quality
09:47In a completely different experience than the need for a long time
09:49They gathered people and made them touch paper without seeing it.
09:52Despite that, people said that shiny paper feels better to the touch.
09:55And they resembled in their imagination the most beautiful
09:57Imagine that the picture on it probably has more water in it.
09:59At the end of the experiment, they wanted to see the effect of thirst.
10:02They let a group of people eat, but I was salty, without letting them drink.
10:04Then they showed them a collection of pictures
10:06Some are shiny, some are matte.
10:08This, my dear, is something very interesting.
10:10Those who were thirsty preferred the images that shone with a very clear difference.
10:14It's as if my dear brain, when it felt thirsty, looked for something shiny.
10:18What this study concluded is that people's love for scrutiny
10:21It has nothing to do with fashion or taste.
10:24The subject is purely biological.
10:25We intentionally assume that shiny things contain water.
10:30Because the water is sparkling
10:31Early humans searched for water every day because it was the most important resource for their lives.
10:36And that's what helped him discover that there was water far away
10:38Shiny dear
10:40Let me ask you a question, my dear
10:41What's the secret to gold's shine? To answer this question, let's agree on something.
10:45The luster of gold, in particular, is different from the luster of any other metal.
10:48This is because its shine is the result of a very strange chemical and physical property.
10:53Something, my dear, happens specifically with gold in an exclusive way.
10:57Let's take a simple step towards understanding that some metals shine and some don't.
11:02The corn, my dear, is simply a type of text.
11:05A group of electrons spins around it at very high speeds.
11:08And it moves in different orbits
11:09The nucleus contains protons.
11:11These protons are what determine the type of element.
11:14Electrons, on the other hand, revolve around specific energy levels in what? The nucleus.
11:18Each level has its own form and specific behavior.
11:21Chapter 1 in the Chemistry book
11:22My dear, metal shines when the electrons surrounding the nucleus receive light and then reflect it back.
11:28This means that when a beam of light falls on the surface of a shiny metal, its electrons move quickly and are able to absorb some of the light's energy.
11:36Then it starts again in the form of reflected light.
11:39And that, my dear, is what makes us see the shiny, sparkling [vegetation/vegetation].
11:42But for this process to happen, the electrons must be free enough to move.
11:46Not being tightly attached to the core is a characteristic found in a large number of lustrous metals.
11:51Metals such as silver, aluminum, and copper
11:54Almost all these metals shine for the same reason: the free electrons in their outer shell.
12:00You can absorb the dummy and then release it again.
12:03A source that stops beside the nucleus
12:04What I want to tell you, my dear friend, is that one of them does this using the gold method.
12:08It's not like we're playing 4-4-2 diamond, Abu Hamam.
12:10The idea, my dear, isn't about the formation of the game.
12:11The idea is that the gold's core is very heavy.
12:14It contains a large number of protons
12:1679 protons
12:17This directly affects the movement of electrons around them.
12:20Due to the large mass of the nucleus
12:21Electrons in orbits closest to the nucleus
12:23It's moving with very, very, very current frankness.
12:26It's so prevalent, my dear, that it's almost like a commodity like light.
12:29At that moment, the ordinary laws of physics break down.
12:31It's not enough to describe what's happening inside him.
12:33And then we need to explain this behavior using Einstein's laws of relativity.
12:37And according to relativity physics
12:39Scientists have named the phenomenon that occurs here
12:41In the name of relative effects
12:43Relativistic effects
12:44Dear Aziz, there are changes occurring in the form and arrangement of energy levels.
12:47Which are located around the nucleus
12:49Especially when the electrons are very fast
12:51We can say that this incredible speed makes the orbit closest to the nucleus
12:55It shrinks, just like you said.
12:57And the orbit after it expands
12:58This changes the way gold interacts with light.
13:01As a result of the changes that occur at the orbital level, these orbits
13:04The gold is part of the light fiber.
13:06Specifically, purple and blue colors
13:09And then the rest goes, like God, yellow and orange.
13:11My dear, gold doesn't reflect all the light like silver does.
13:14No, this is a thief who covets a part of it.
13:15He takes it from inside and doesn't let it out again.
13:17The gold strikes a piece of light
13:18The part of the light that gold reflects
13:20That's what makes it have a warm color.
13:22It's what gives it its distinctive color.
13:23It makes him look like a piece of the sun itself.
13:25And despite the fact, my dear, that there are many shiny metals
13:27So you and I and the Arabic schools
13:29We know very well that not all that glitters is gold.
13:31Sometimes gold is found in the tears of a short man's eyes.
13:35The strange thing, my dear, is that these metals
13:37None of them shine in the same way as gold.
13:38Gold doesn't just reflect light.
13:40No, this is dealt with using a different and unique physical equation.
13:44Also due to the scarcity of gold types
13:45And the electrons are held together around it
13:47These electrons don't move easily.
13:48Nor does she easily interact with anything around her.
13:51Not even with the same desire
13:52You know very well that interaction with air creates an echo in the element.
13:55That's why not reacting to desires is very important.
13:58The air contains oxygen and humidity
13:59And these, my dear, when they react with metals or with girls' hair
14:02They cause trouble and problems that can't be solved
14:05When metal is exposed to these things, a layer of rust appears.
14:08That's why his self-imposed isolation and self-sufficiency are the reason he's closed off.
14:1079 protons is a big deal in the country.
14:12Take it with you as a professional and you will surpass it
14:14This type of abrasive is what prevents the element from ever rusting.
14:16This is what makes it more than just a metal that shines in a special way.
14:19No, this is also a metal that is stable in its shape, color, and condition.
14:22It might not change for thousands and thousands of years
14:25That's why, my dear, we find gold in pharaonic tombs.
14:27Fresh grape leaves, as if they just came out of the sugar mine.
14:30No other metal can do that.
14:33The truth, my dear, is that gold has no magic or luster.
14:35Its chemical properties protect it from changes and corrosion.
14:38By making it a stable and unique metal
14:40And most importantly, it remains a rare metal.
14:41When we say, my dear, that it is a rare metal
14:43That doesn't mean we can't find it at all in nature. (My eyes loved it!)
14:46Gold, the key factor in the balanced equation, is rare, but not extremely rare.
14:49Rare enough that it remains awe-inspiring.
14:51It is in demand, but not so rare as to be impossible to obtain.
14:54For example, according to World Gold Council's estimates
14:57Throughout its history, humanity has extracted approximately the equivalent of
15:00Two hundred and sixteen thousand tons of gold
15:02Two hundred and sixteen, and I tried it, oh my, Abu Ahmad!
15:06Whose network is this, Abu Ahmed?
15:07My dear Shorjina, please don't scratch this number. It's incredibly, incredibly, incredibly small in the grand scheme of human endeavor.
15:11If we add all of this number together, we'll make a cube of gold with a bucket length of 22 meters.
15:17Also, my dear, every year the world extracts only 3,500 tons of gold.
15:21This is a very small number compared to other materials like iron and copper.
15:25From which we extract hundreds of millions of tons annually
15:29If you were to look at the distribution of gold on Earth, you would find it present in very small proportions.
15:37One of the mines is a dish, and I thanked him, it breaks with difficulty. This is what we say is rare, but not very rare
15:40The one who is feeling very anxious, even though, my dear, all these numbers are indicators of his intense gaze.
15:45But there's another number that's very important and necessary for us to remember.
15:48For example, by 1950, humans had extracted only a third of the gold.
15:51From 1950 to 1925, we gained approximately two-thirds
15:55This says that despite the high value of gold
15:57Science and technology have helped humans to develop more precise and efficient methods of exploration and extraction.
16:03With every new mine that opens, every new ingot that comes out, and every new jewelry store that opens
16:07We make sure that the gold is still there and not just one.
16:09This means that humanity's journey with gold is still ongoing.
16:12There's still gold in the ground, and it's still required of you, and you'll get it by force in order to get through.
16:16And the psalms predict that you will be satisfied, and you will be satisfied.
16:19Without all the gold in the world, you are worshipped while you have nothing.
16:22God didn't pray for the Prophet of gold, its price has been rising since 2022. If we don't see you wearing it, even your most casual outfits will be adorned with accessories.
16:30What are you afraid of for your cypress tree? Huh?
16:3230 years ago, the world lost its gold and its people were bald from the earth and left.
16:35It's important, my dear, to set aside personality issues and gender issues.
16:38The journey to Dahab is tiring, but there's a real challenge.
16:40The business is still profitable and generating income.
16:42This is what makes gold prospecting an adventure, but not a gamble.
16:46That's why, my dear, gold is asking me about the degree of its gaze.
16:48If we had extracted it a little easier, the value might have been lost.
16:50If it were rarer, we wouldn't have seen it at all.
16:52Of course, my dear, this episode has probably opened
16:54Not so you can learn about the chemical properties of gold
16:58And you know that the electrons move around the nucleus
17:00The light that comes out and the light that goes in
17:03Why do we like things that shine or not?
17:05You came here because you want to buy Spike Betty C
17:07And you sell them again after they've gone up a little.
17:10You are there on 24 grams
17:11There are wars and geopolitical instability
17:14The one who raises the price of gold
17:15And you want to overcome your greed and avarice
17:18Mohammed, with a mortar, I am shaped for your grass.
17:19A small note: I'm the last one in investing.
17:21I put my money into Kinder chocolates
17:23I heard that Kinder chocolate and cumin get fatter over time.
17:26This is the level of investment; contact me from here.
17:27But the gold, the hunting, and the ten and ten pounds
17:31I don't know about this.
17:32I only see them at airports.
17:33I'm the only caliber that knows
17:35I'll shoot him in the head with a bullet to kill him.
17:37Generally speaking, you're going to be safe from your difficult circumstances.
17:39Let's stick with my dear, and the one who's with my dear is coming.
17:41By God, Muhammad, they're all bankrupt.
17:43Hey ...
17:43I mean, I won't give him the treatment for seniors.
17:45Okay, tell me so I can get an idea
17:46Thieves, my dear, just as it is rare in its specifications
17:49It also occupies a very rare place in the field of economics.
17:52The most famous banker in history, J.P. Marjawan
17:54A famous saying is attributed to him
17:55She says that gold is money
17:57Everything included is just for use.
17:59This might seem like talk
18:00He glorifies and agrees with the frog
18:01But even its benefits are precise
18:02We need to understand what this means.
18:04puzzle
18:04What does "Atman" mean?
18:06You now, my dear
18:07You probably have money for a printed piece of paper.
18:09Ali Serial Number and Watermark
18:11And you go and buy it with that little piece of paper
18:12For example, a shawarma sandwich
18:13Shawarma sandwiches are clearly visible in your life
18:15He goes in here, and I, and I, and he goes in here.
18:17This one is blocking it, this one is relaxing, this one is smiling, Digla Hamouda
18:20Everyone is happy
18:21The shawarma sandwich has a clear value
18:23But this piece of paper, whether it's dollars, pounds, or Japanese yen
18:26What's its value? The truth is, the whole thing is a bit confusing.
18:28Because we were raised to believe that money
18:30The reality of Ceuta in our lives
18:32Something that was born and found to exist like air
18:34The air we breathe, we don't ask if it's our duty.
18:36We breathe it, but the answer, my dear, is very simple.
18:38Money itself is a piece of paper worth three times its value.
18:41Nor is it made of anything that has three values.
18:42No one should say that about a blessing.
18:43You're saying this is a flaw, a flaw.
18:45Dear, I'm talking about cash, not money here.
18:47Or what money represents, or what money represents
18:49Before I explain, let me go back a little.
18:50To understand how the concept of money originally began
18:52Why would you go to the shower attendant and give him this paper?
18:55Fedeco caught her sandwich
18:57Back in the day, my dear, before the money system existed
19:00People were using a system called barter.
19:02Exchange goods directly
19:03You have wheat and you need meat, so you're looking for a butcher.
19:06Working with a partnership means the issue ends with everyone going to their acquaintances' place.
19:09An easy and simple system, and something is meant to be done.
19:12But my dear, I didn't have time; many problems appeared in the exchange.
19:15Simply put, the person in front of you doesn't always have to need the person you're with.
19:17So you have wheat and I have problems with gluten.
19:19How do we deal with this? You're a butcher and I'm a vegetarian.
19:21You didn't enter my house
19:22There is also another problem, which is that some goods
19:24It's not easy to store, transport, or allow
19:27It means it's difficult to carry a small amount of wheat from one village to another.
19:30And then, for example, he might have a group and benefit from half of it.
19:33How will you do it?
19:34And from here, my dear, an important idea began to emerge, which is the idea of the mediator.
19:38People began using a particular commodity as a medium of exchange.
19:41Provided that this commodity is feared by everyone and easy to name
19:44And it lives a long time without getting sick
19:46For example, you find societies that have started using salt as if it were money.
19:49Then the pickle season will be Shark Tang.
19:57With much burial, hides, and salt
19:59There are still things that shine, don't rust, and don't raise blood pressure.
20:02Things that are shiny, look nice, and are durable
20:04It doesn't deteriorate over time and is remarkably rare.
20:07And here the precious equivalent began to be feared on the line
20:09Gold and silver clothing and societies already
20:11She began to make coins from them and put stamps of the Malugh on them.
20:14Because here begins a new journey called coinage
20:18But up to the moment, I'll tell you about this one.
20:19The currency had value, and its value came from the value of the metal it contained.
20:23Gold or silver
20:23The shape of the stamp on it is not important; what matters is the metal it is made of.
20:26The matter is preferable and will continue in this form for many centuries.
20:29Until paper money appeared
20:30The most common question you get before you go to sleep
20:32Who was the first person to decide to print paper and say that it has value and become rich?
20:36Let's talk, my dear, and then we'll go.
20:37Initially, my dear, the paper served as a receipt.
20:40A document stating that you have a right with the state
20:42You go and take a quantity of paper with it
20:44And silver, whenever you like it
20:46The paper itself still doesn't have its own set of challenges.
20:48But behind it is real gold that I'm keeping safe for you.
20:50And the entity that issued this document to you is responsible for it.
20:53And so these papers became like a receipt of trust.
20:55A bond of trust on precious metal
20:57Which at that time was the true backing for your currency.
20:59People accepted this idea because it simply makes the engraving easier.
21:02Ease up on the dealings and make it more logical, as if it were backed by gold.
21:05But then something happened
21:07The modification was completely changed
21:08When US President Nixon came to power in the early seventies
21:10He told them, "Never mind, Shabana, that's the rule of the game."
21:12Be the strongest man in the world
21:13We will separate the gold plating from the dollar printing.
21:15I won't just print paper, I'll separate it from gold.
21:18Because I didn't want to cause inflation on a popular level
21:19Where is she, my dear? A new phase has begun in the world.
21:21The paper we used for it as a receipt
21:23It transformed and remained the same: money.
21:25If the dollar had a higher value back then
21:27From the fact that he is making a certain value in gold
21:29So now the value of dollars is coming
21:31But there's one thing: the United States of America
21:33The most powerful country in the world said that he is the value
21:35I woke up and decided that this green vine would bring you
21:37You're passing it around, and honestly, my dear, what's it getting you?
21:39Honestly, from that moment on, there was a complete break.
21:41Between money and life value
21:43Which this value represents
21:44A country of roses, they started walking in this trent
21:47They severed the link between the currency and gold.
21:49Therefore, money remained just one of them.
21:52It means God willing
21:53The economy of the country that printed this currency
21:55And the world economy that uses this currency
21:57Based on that, God willing, God willing
21:58It will remain stable, God willing, this currency
22:01Her mother is not affected and remains able to buy
22:03The same products, therefore his money today
22:05It's not something I have any meanings for.
22:06But what exactly is it?
22:08Trust
22:08I hope to become President of the United States of America
22:11This dollar will buy me these things
22:13Trust, my dear, is the key.
22:14Because I have an economic crisis that is shaking the world
22:16Or even by destabilizing a particular country
22:18People are losing faith in banks and in the currency.
22:20Everything comes from the state.
22:22And gold is used as a safe investment vehicle.
22:24But, Muhammad, why gold?
22:25Because, my dear, gold is not a promise.
22:27Gold is not a loan and does not require trust.
22:29This situation is not related to either politics or economics.
22:31Amto is coming from the same person
22:33Gold, my dear, is made possible by its electrons, nucleus, and heat.
22:36It won't rust, and its weight won't decrease.
22:38Gold is the original value
22:40The one who tries to imitate everything
22:41Or you borrow its prestige
22:43My dear Nadi, for example, you're still holding Bitcoin.
22:45Digital Gold
22:46They made me a Bitcoin cryptocurrency
22:47However, the currency that represents gold in the digital world
22:51It's as if, my dear, we're all living in a scene where we're all in a world
22:54Paper money or digital money is what governs it
22:57But in the background there is a solid, heavy metal
23:00A stable, shiny metal that has stood the same for thousands of years
23:03And he tells us in the utmost tranquility
23:04I am the real money, the rest are just promises.
23:07I get the money, the rest is kisses
23:09Me and the rest
23:11My dear, I'm trying to make connections without connections.
23:13And this, my dear, is what makes the great Muslims
23:15After they smell that there is a dwarf's scent
23:17They go and buy gold
23:18Sometimes the goal isn't necessarily profit.
23:20No, that's just hiding.
23:21This makes it the closest thing to what nature has produced.
23:23The idea of perfect money
23:25With this question
23:25If all of us in one moment
23:27We headed towards gold in this way
23:28Could this be a spirit of consequences?
23:30If we applied this to reality, my dear
23:31And simplify the condition in front of you.
23:33You will find that sometimes the price of gold
23:34He jumps around like crazy, 50 years old
23:36The first time, as you can see, was in the year 1080.
23:38After gas and the Soviet Union of Afghanistan
23:41Oil prices at that time reached a year
23:43At that point, investors turned to gold.
23:46And the second time in recent years, after the global crisis in 2008
23:48And that's when investors went to gold for the same reason.
23:50The clock was a very
23:52There's no time for jokes and silliness.
23:53Don't tell the stock exchange, the banks, or your money; it's right there on your phone screen.
23:57But we are currently observing
23:58And in 2025, there was a huge jump in gold prices.
24:01By 40% in 2024
24:03The allure of gold reaches $3500 per ounce
24:06The jump, my dear, was a strange jump.
24:08Everyone is going to Dahab now
24:10companies as well
24:13Centralized blocks for some countries
24:15Costumes of Poland, Turkey, India and China
24:17And Azerbaijan too
24:18They started investing their money in gold from the beginning of 2028
24:21They buy 1000 tons of gold annually
24:23Abu Ahmed asked the question, definitely and absolutely necessary, and you're dying to ask him.
24:25Why has this world been afflicted with this frenzy?
24:27Why can't a person trust another person?
24:30Is there some planetary arrival?
24:32Is this due to anxiety and panic?
24:33Or is it because of the spread of counterfeit money?
24:36Honestly, my dear, there are many reasons.
24:38Some say it might be because Term is in power
24:41And every day, new decisions are made in the economy.
24:44But let me tell you that the issue predates this too.
24:46In 2022, in the context of the Russian-Ukrainian war
24:49All of the Russian central bank's reserves have been frozen.
24:52And countries have begun to worry about what is called
24:57Arming the Euro-Dollar System
24:59If countries at any point deviate from European and American interests
25:02And she rejoices over the delusional politician
25:05Their assets might be lost and their reserves seized.
25:07My dear Lord, may He protect us from this predicament of being in a reserve position?
25:09My dear friend, the Russian Central Bank has entered, my darling.
25:12The workers are turning over the water pipes and see that I'm one of them, working.
25:14May God protect us from the predicament of being in the reserve.
25:16It will come at the end of the month
25:17My reserve fund is not enough
25:19Yalla Riso, this is Abu Hamad
25:20And how do you behave?
25:21Please, my dear, I'm not borrowing.
25:22Whenever I'm in a tight spot, I borrow money.
25:24Covered by the sovereign wealth fund
25:25No one but the sovereign wealth fund can cover my costs
25:27These countries, my dear, have begun to feel fear.
25:29They thought that they would put their assets into a valuable storehouse
25:32The warehouse is now not under the control of any single state.
25:34It has nothing to do with the market or the dollar.
25:36And of course, there's nothing better than gold to put our money into.
25:39Even countries and entities that have nothing to do with this whole thing
25:41She started buying out of a thousand liras
25:43Fair of Missing Out
25:44Since everyone else is buying, why shouldn't I?
25:46Therefore, predictions suggest that it will reach $4,000 per ounce in 2026.
25:50The one we told you, dear, in this episode, tells us about the gold standard.
25:52But this raises concerns about the emergence of something resembling an economic bubble.
25:56What we did about it before
25:58What happened after 1980 and the dwarf of 2008
26:00The price of gold has also dropped.
26:02And everyone suddenly stopped buying
26:03That's why all the advice, as usual, is disappearing now.
26:05You, my friend, don't put everything in one basket.
26:08Invest the income in gold
26:09But as part of a diversified investment portfolio
26:12In conclusion, my dear, gold is indeed a unique element.
26:14That's why, after thousands of years and in a completely modern world
26:16Large and small countries alike still see a kind of dormancy in it.
26:20The stability that the whole world is looking for
26:22In the midst of wars and political instability
26:24Gold is presented as the only truth that doesn't concern you
26:26But despite all this
26:27So, my dear, remember well the gold.
26:29Not a magic stone
26:30He won't automatically solve the world's problems.
26:32Just like the old alchemists imagined
26:33Gold, at least up to this moment
26:35It will remain a brilliant store of value
26:37But the price differences could make us very profitable
26:39But it could also cost us a lot
26:41Because its price always depends on two things
26:43Human movement surrounds us, and supply and demand
26:45Their collective agreement
26:46Their agreement on its prices at a specific moment
26:48This is very important.
26:49We will never forget him
26:50By God, this gold will drive us crazy!
26:52Oh my god, what a mess!
26:53You are a howling detail
26:54Let's start with the word, not "fire," you.
26:55And I'll see what you think, my dear, for the upcoming episodes.
26:57I'm going down with the difficult path of righteousness that I raised by subscribing to the channel.
26:58Let me tell you a sad joke, my dear
27:00The credit goes to Abu Hamid
27:00He tells you, my dear, once, Jawahir G
27:02Health from sleep
27:02They look at his son like that
27:03No shave
27:04Medicine and work, Abu Hamid
27:05He sold it
27:06alloy alloy
27:08Oh, the one you want to stay with