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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
00:01music
00:03enough
00:05Enough, you fool!
00:06That's the end.
00:13Oh
00:14I'm doing this to you, and I'm less
00:16Yo
00:17I'll know you warned me about poisonous plants.
00:20And from the burrows of snakes
00:21And from the investment of funds
00:23But it didn't work, resist, my brother.
00:24What happened, O Resist?
00:27I am weak and less
00:30Ignorant and stupid
00:31And flirting with everyone around me
00:33But this guy was light-hearted
00:36No, not yet
00:37Okay, then be quiet.
00:39Shut up, I don't want to hear your boasting.
00:40I'm telling you to shut up
00:41By the way
00:43You are a ball
00:44You are the thing
00:45You are a figment of my imagination
00:46You're not real
00:47I'm jealous of you because it's real
00:49real body
00:50True thought
00:52My real failure
00:53My lack of awareness
00:54And my inability to integrate into society normally
00:56It's true too
00:57What did you carry?
01:14Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.
01:22Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you.
01:24Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program
01:26On September 6, 1992
01:28During a tour by a group of hunters in the Alaskan forests
01:31They discover the decomposing body of a young man.
01:33Inside an old scrap metal factory
01:34They used fishermen as guards during storms.
01:36They fear it
01:37The fishermen will be a little surprised
01:38Because this young man who died is not from the area.
01:40Or so they thought.
01:42Their suspicion will be confirmed when they learn the identity of the body.
01:44This body will be that of a young man named Christopher McCandless.
01:47The young man is 24 years old.
01:48Sahna will decide after he graduates from university.
01:51He will donate all his savings
01:53Those whose families saved it during his lifetime
01:54And it stems from his luxurious standard of living.
01:56He cuts off his relationship with people
01:57He lives as a nomad in nature.
01:59Christopher was convinced that he was close to nature
02:01He will get closer to himself
02:02He remained alone, away from this materialistic, consumerist world.
02:04The life we are living in
02:05But Chris's romantic journey will end
02:07A slow and painful death
02:09From hunger for days
02:11After he was poisoned
02:12When he ate plant seeds
02:13He can't eat it
02:14Chris's story will be turned into a book
02:16Titled Into the Wild
02:17And director Sean Penn
02:18He will turn it into a movie
02:19With the same name in 2007
02:20And after that, this story will become a symbol.
02:23Thousands of letters will be sent to the book's author.
02:25From young people who thank him
02:26Although his story inspired them
02:28And they say they too will escape the modern world.
02:30And they try Christopher's adventures
02:32The youth are already
02:33They're going to Alaska
02:34They visit the bus
02:35The one Christopher died in
02:36And the road to him is dangerous
02:37And he passes through a deadly river
02:38A river called Tiklanika
02:39To the point that forest rangers
02:41They will say that 75%
02:43From rescue operations
02:44What happened in the area
02:45There are no more fishermen living there.
02:46This is for young people from outside Alaska
02:48They come to visit the bus
02:49What a beautiful thing to say to today's youth
02:51And he didn't know how to get between them
02:52He's trying out this country's troubles
02:53Jonathan Crowe's costume
02:55Those who will die in 2013
02:56In the forests of Oregon, USA
02:57In an attempt to imitate Christ's journey
02:59Up to the National Guard
03:01I'm telling you, people, have mercy on our families.
03:02We will change you
03:03They'll pick up the bus from here
03:04We rise from the dangerous place
03:06What was in the forest
03:07Alaska made this decision
03:08After a couple drowned in 2019
03:11They are trying to cross the river to the bus.
03:13You're exaggerating, my dear, going to Alaska?
03:14So you can find something that made you fall asleep on a junk bus
03:16With his shoes
03:17Author Craig Medard
03:18He said there was something wrong with Christopher D's story
03:20It means it's a story about men, huh?
03:22But it's not damaged at all.
03:23Its owner deserves fame.
03:25Or it remains a source of inspiration
03:26Because in his opinion
03:27This is a rich and determined young man
03:28I endure romantically with an unforgiving nature
03:30He died because of his ignorance of the rules of nature.
03:33Hurry up, Abu Hamad!
03:33I was a witness to that.
03:34But I was too embarrassed to tell her
03:35Why are you shy around me, my dear?
03:36God, I mean, I insulted you.
03:38So you can say something
03:39I've been cheering you on my whole life
03:40If you ask, think, and act like that
03:42You, Abu Hamad
03:43If I were to get a fingerprint as a partner
03:44On the side of the love is
03:45I was bothering you
03:46Meanwhile, science writer Steve Silberman
03:48He addressed appeals to the teenagers, telling them
03:50The story of Christopher D
03:51It ended tragically
03:53It's worth it if we stay present
03:54In cooperation with nature
03:55It's not a reckless romance story
03:57Oh, my dear
03:58Christopher was a rich, dreamy young man
04:00What took enough time
04:01To understand and study the nature
04:02The one who will deal with her
04:03But that wasn't the case
04:04With the environmental activist and director
04:06Demothy Treadol
04:07The one who spent 13 years
04:08Pedersen and Beewsq's Life of Bears
04:11Grizzly Bears
04:12In a reserve in Alaska
04:12Muhammad is anyone
04:13Mohamed, you're beautifying everything
04:14Without going to Alaska
04:15Mohammed, you're carrying Alaska
04:16All the information you have
04:16Alaska bids her farewell and brings her to me
04:18Hello dear redemption
04:19Demotte after ten films
04:21The one who created it about his friendly relationship with the bears
04:23He and his girlfriend
04:24It will be done in their homes
04:262003
04:27What's the bear doing in the reserve itself?
04:29famous director
04:30Werner Herzog
04:31Whoever makes a documentary about this imprisonment
04:32He says that all the videos
04:34The one who took the picture is Demothy
04:35He described the bears as affectionate and intelligent.
04:37Werner, when he returned it, looked like a director
04:39All he saw were bears moving around carelessly.
04:42Her eyes held no love, no mercy, and no feelings whatsoever.
04:45Werner described this and said
04:46I looked carefully into the eyes of these bears
04:48Nature is not romantic.
04:50As Timothy saw it
04:51She's not even savage, hateful, or against us.
04:53She is simply indifferent.
04:55indifferent
04:56bear
04:57Timothy didn't betray him.
04:58There is no betrayal
04:58They ate very simply
04:59Because they were in October
05:01And all those who worked on October
05:02Food storage time before winter
05:04And everyone who saw Timothy
05:05A piece of meat that moves
05:06What is this fat?
05:07It will increase the time of winter environments
05:09He's not just a friend, I've lived with him for years, he's my brother, my love, and a true gentleman
05:12And my father's son, whom my father did not bring into this world
05:13tendency
05:14Something to keep me warm in winter
05:15Here, my dear
05:16We must take a stand
05:17Why are there people like Timothy and Christopher?
05:19They could dedicate their lives to connecting with nature.
05:22Not scientific communication or caution
05:23Like what botanists and zoologists do
05:25And they communicate with nature
05:27romantic contact
05:28Timothy announced a lot
05:29Life with bears is better than life with humans.
05:32Dear Aziz, you are suspicious of everyone.
05:34If I were a carpenter
05:35I'll find wood more beautiful than people.
05:36Anyone, my dear, on any topic, tells you
05:38But I do this better than other people.
05:39Basketball is sweeter than people
05:40Christopher also wrote in his memoirs
05:42He found his true self in nature
05:44Those who couldn't find it in the descending city
05:46In the end, they were victims of nature.
05:48The one who expresses herself
05:49In the form of a poisonous plant or a bear
05:51He's getting ready for his winter stay.
05:52It seems to you, my dear, in your romantic narratives
05:54These are rare incidents
05:55But it's actually a boring daily routine that happens every day in the forest.
05:59Every day in the forest there is prey and there is a predator
06:02It contains a poisonous plant and an animal in mating season.
06:05It contains an animal in its winter hibernation season.
06:07And an animal in the breeding season
06:09There is a night, there is prey, and there is a predator every day.
06:13If I took you, my dear, on a journey through time
06:14You will find that our relationship with nature as humans
06:17I didn't start like that at all.
06:18My dear, we never had any romantic feelings towards nature.
06:22You might think I'm preparing for a dramatic exit.
06:24The truth is, your assumption is correct.
06:25I'm good at dramatic exits and normal returns.
06:27The workers were saddened by the end of the Ice Age
06:30Over thousands of years
06:31Biodiversity on Earth began
06:33178 species of sadists have gone extinct
06:37Between 52,000 and 9000 BC
06:40The interpretation that existed for a long time
06:42This happened before climate change.
06:44But in 1966, the world of paleontology will present
06:47Paul S. Martin Theory
06:49The one who says that all these sadisms
06:52She died from a single organism
06:54He's watching the screen now.
06:58This theory was described as
07:00Romantic perception faded
07:02The one who says that our ancestors lived in peace with nature
07:05Although the theory is controversial
07:06However, what the workers agree upon
07:08Man began his relationship with nature
07:10hostility and fighting
07:12Because it's a place designed to kill him
07:14And the children alone were wary of nature.
07:16He killed its creatures before they killed him.
07:18And sometimes when man is unable to fight nature
07:20He decided that he worshipped her.
07:21The forest goddesses appeared in the form of Aja in Africa.
07:23God reflected human attributes upon Him
07:25Those who wanted to see it in nature
07:27So let her be kind, healing, and caring.
07:29Nature may hear their prayers and have mercy
07:32Professor Mark Mazlin says this animosity will change.
07:36When a person finds that the animals around him are becoming extinct
07:39Our horse's defense is no longer reliable.
07:41And forget about it less in the annual
07:42At that point, humans will turn to agriculture.
07:44If you were to consider his role in something like agriculture
07:46You will discover something truly amazing
07:48If you just look at it in a certain way, you'll find it's a deal.
07:50This is a transition from a state of infection to one of nature.
07:53The one who wants to kill us every day
07:54Lofaa, throw away your seed
07:56And place it in certain conditions
07:58And you wait for nature to bring you the brown one
08:00So now it's inevitable that you'll take and give
08:03In harmony with nature
08:05Take care of it, water it, and protect it.
08:07It gives you the reward
08:08A relationship that benefited me, but you benefited me.
08:10And Tutu on Caputo
08:11And the crying on the head of the dead
08:12Mahmoud, this is the language of nature.
08:14No, dear, that's just metaphorical talk.
08:15According to Mark
08:17This relationship worked very well
08:18To the point that 96% of sadists on Earth
08:21Currently, it's either humans or Livestock.
08:24Which animals have humans been watching?
08:26For agriculture
08:27Human beings, my dear
08:28Because it is closer to nature through agriculture
08:30She is not aggressive nor is she against him.
08:32Like the days of the master and the scrap
08:33Days of mourning for Mr. and Mr.'s agents
08:35But in the case of agriculture, there is a system
08:37Succession of seasons and rains
08:38And each one has its own conditions
08:40So that it can be planted
08:41A contract consisting of clauses between two parties
08:43They give and they benefit
08:45And suddenly the light came on for the human.
08:47He told you, "Well, nature isn't a monster; it's just that we hate it."
08:49This is an entity with clear rules and regulations.
08:51When we enter the eighteenth century, or what is called the Enlightenment era
08:54The man, may God bless him
08:56Hesib El-Gheit and his laws
08:57And he begins to think more scientifically
08:59He will know Newton's laws and mechanics.
09:00And he will also find that nature outside the field is full of laws.
09:03He makes scientific discoveries
09:05All of them are based on human understanding.
09:07For the natural laws that surround him
09:09These scientific discoveries
09:10It will move humans from agriculture to industry
09:12Coal and steam card
09:14While agriculture was man's primary activity
09:16The field doesn't matter, and it's always in nature.
09:18Industry means factories
09:19This means cities are being built around factories.
09:21In barren lands far from the countryside
09:23When man left the fields and lived in the city
09:25Amidst the noise, smoke, and cement
09:28Samah started saying that
09:29He longs for nature again
09:31The air blew through the forest waterfalls
09:33Stars of the night
09:34Welcome, my dear
09:35Nature has now
09:36X
09:37The one who remembers all her good days
09:38And you forget that she was humiliating you
09:40And here a movement began to emerge in art, literature, and painting.
09:43Named for the Romantic movement
09:46A movement that says this industrial image is depressing
09:48and the color of gray
09:49The color of smoke and exhaust
09:51The noise and the crowd
09:52Our shelf
09:53Give us back nature
09:54The most important one in this movement
09:55He is the philosopher Jean Jacquesson
09:57The one who once led Perry Gernan
09:591749
10:00Hey, I have an important question in front of me in the newspaper
10:02Is the industrial and scientific progress happening now
10:05Let's improve our morals
10:06It made us so close to ourselves
10:08And the Jaida made an invitation to the one who violated it
10:10If they send slingshots
10:11Please
10:11Explain to us
10:12They understood us
10:13Why are people frustrated?
10:14They yearn for the fields and crops.
10:15While capitalism, my darling
10:18Shaylana, Shaghala, and her walk is luzluz
10:20Raswa will write her article
10:22It will turn into a complete philosophy
10:23He tells me
10:23The best state in which humans lived
10:25Because they were close to nature
10:26And he named it
10:27state of nature
10:28Sweep
10:28Cultivate your land
10:29Milk your buffalo
10:30You are making a promise to your neighbor.
10:32And return home
10:33While in the city
10:34We all lived next to each other
10:35Instead of everyone being comfortable
10:37It's still there now
10:38Everything is compact
10:39For work
10:39And for the flirt
10:40Horse riding
10:41Now we'll get dressed
10:41Yunfor from the factory
10:42Dress for the party
10:43And he wore the clothes for the sanctuary
10:44Everyone started comparing themselves to each other
10:46In terms of salary
10:47Clothing and place
10:48Therefore
10:49People started themselves
10:50Her morals are in Gazette
10:51And I'm no longer an infant
10:51Instead of looking at the blue sky
10:53The one in Ena
10:53We should keep looking at what others have.
10:55And on top of that, there was more
10:56above it
10:57above it
10:58above it
10:59above it
11:02Anchoring
11:03He gave an example of an argument
11:04Famous in his time
11:05Around the indigenous population
11:06For the Americas
11:07European reports
11:08Those I described in the sixteenth century
11:10She said they were very simple people financially.
11:12And more nature
11:13Their communities are cohesive and cooperative.
11:15More peaceful and happier than Europe
11:18But after the arrival of the Europeans
11:20They became civilized and remained similar to them.
11:21A man who doesn't start with a cold, dear one
11:23It will come to you from where you least expect it
11:24It makes you want him like you want it
11:25And your problems are like his.
11:27And before, no one would hear about existential problems.
11:28What brought about these existential problems?
11:30I find colonialism
11:31And the Indian remained
11:31He kills his Indian brother
11:32Because of a family of alcoholics
11:34Not even a little jewelry
11:35Things that hold a special place in their hearts
11:36It didn't have any meaning back then.
11:37If they lived in nature
11:39The one with the fat jewel
11:40It has no functional use.
11:41In their daily lives
11:42Therefore, it has no value.
11:44His messenger will transform nature for the first time
11:45Benhiz Makani
11:46and a few resources
11:47We try to understand its rules and exploit them
11:49A system of laws that will not only make our lives easier
11:51But if we go along with her
11:53It will improve our morals
11:54Our lives will be better
11:55Because it will be simpler
11:56Even if we went against it
11:57Our morals will be ruined
11:59Anthropology
12:00Mali Douglas says
12:01Some people will start to see nature.
12:03A system of laws that is impressive in its precision
12:05Better than the laws that governments put in place
12:07And suddenly the person decides
12:08The rulebook of right and wrong
12:10In his interaction with the people around him
12:12Which is essentially based on morality
12:14It turns into a natural ruler
12:16And what is not normal
12:17So when you're cheating on me with someone
12:18Then someone comes along and asks you, "What does religion say?"
12:20What does the tribe or the government say?
12:22The question now is
12:23Is this behavior normal?
12:24It's not normal
12:25Be careful, my dear
12:26Describing something as normal or abnormal
12:27Something that doesn't fit properly
12:28And it will change over the ages
12:30Just as attitudes towards racism have changed, for example
12:32Interracial marriage
12:33It was an unnatural need
12:34So what are you going to tell me about what's normal and what's not normal?
12:36I'll tell you, you'll keep looking
12:37That's why this system of ethics was described
12:39That she
12:41Mercenary moral system
12:43Anyone can take it and stop it
12:45So that he can fix it to his liking
12:46He supports any cause, no matter what.
12:48And man, the more he distances himself from nature
12:50He lived in secure concrete cities.
12:52Thousands of miles from the forests
12:54And all that remained of his relationship with animals
12:56He saw her in a cage, lying in the zoo.
12:58Every time he forgets what the newcomers used to see every day
13:01Nature, my dear, is truly savage.
13:03Its animals made it into its era
13:05What happened was that with civilization
13:06Human romantic tendencies
13:07Not just to make nature a distant beloved of humankind
13:10When we reach that point, our lives will improve and become better.
13:13No, she's also my beloved, we've wronged her.
13:15The eighteenth century, in which this romantic trend began.
13:18In dealing with nature
13:19It was the same century in which humankind began to know
13:21He started to bully natural resources that are not renewed.
13:24The scientist George Selwys will say in the year 1778
13:27Mining and deforestation
13:29Killing animals for the sake of industrial development
13:32This is a depletion of resources that will not return.
13:34And then the planet will shut down and bring Dorfo
13:36And this, my dear, made our relationship with nature not just romantic.
13:38Nor is it a source of rules and morals.
13:41Rather, it's a relationship filled with guilt.
13:43Ask me, my dear, about these relationships.
13:45Ask me
13:45James Lovelock, the scientist who developed the Gaia hypotheses theory
13:49The one who says that nature with all its elements
13:52Humans, animals, and plants form a single system.
13:55As if it were a single living organism
13:56He will say that modern man's sense of guilt towards nature
13:58And his intense romantic feelings towards her
14:00What enhanced it was a carefully designed lifestyle.
14:03This style makes nature look cute, sesame, and without any risks.
14:08If she saw you, she'd grab you by the arm and ask you, "Where have you been, my son?"
14:11Throw me, my darling, into the embrace of nature's wonders
14:13All of this has transformed some people's feelings towards nature into feelings of reverence.
14:18Our sense of guilt is translated into cinematic university fiction.
14:21For example, in the indie game film Pepe Thanos, half the planet's population is considered parasites.
14:25Their shortcomings will destroy the universe
14:27He will destroy the universe again
14:28And in the film after the massacre
14:30People are surprised to find that nature is actually recovering, the dolphins are playing, and the sky is becoming clearer.
14:34This has already been achieved in the real world.
14:36Not just in the Marvel universe
14:37philosopher
14:38Allen
14:38Livanovic
14:39He says that the first thing Corona did was impose luck on us
14:41Statements emerged that echoed the same idea.
14:43When humans rested and stayed in their homes
14:45Nature has rested
14:46There also started to be many statements from important people in society.
14:50She's saying how much this happened
14:51Good for nature
14:52Good for the environment
14:53Good for the native environment
14:54Good for planet Earth
14:56Who is famous on the internet?
14:57Corona time says
14:59Earth is healing
15:00We are the virus
15:01The planet is recovering
15:02We humans are the real virus
15:04Not Corona
15:04In a study conducted at Simon Fraser University
15:07Titled Environmental Romanticism
15:09She says that the perceptions are etched in the environment
15:11She remained very romantic
15:12To the point that it depicts the Earth in its ideal state.
15:14It was also devoid of humans
15:16This perception
15:16It's no longer about preserving natural resources.
15:18So that we may live
15:19But
15:19Nature has transformed into a living organism
15:22He gets hurt
15:22And he's getting used to it.
15:23This creature must live
15:24Even if it's at our expense
15:25Even if we are the ones who will die
15:26Despite the coronavirus
15:27It is a virus that spreads
15:28And while
15:29A virus is an organism that carries out its normal activity.
15:32Locusts
15:32The one that destroys plants
15:34He's still carrying on with his normal activities.
15:35and the lion
15:36The one who eats the gazelle
15:37He's still carrying on with his normal activities.
15:39It didn't come at the same time, meaning
15:40They will be referred to the court.
15:41Honestly, my dear, we can't deny that we are the most disgusting creatures on the planet.
15:43And of course, we must rationalize the use of resources.
15:45We're looking for a cleaner energy start.
15:47In principle, we don't have to be secretive about ourselves.
15:49We don't have to want people to die.
15:51So that nature can be restored
15:52We do it for any real being that does it
15:54Benservive
15:55Yes, we're trying to survive with Rolex watches and villas.
15:58On the North Coast, private planes, and all that talk
16:01But it means
16:02You get the point, my dear
16:03And then our sheikh, I mean
16:04The most intelligent beings on the planet
16:05We're being spoiled, oh my God!
16:07Dear viewers, I want you to pay attention to this very important moment.
16:11This is because most romantic, dreamy observations are about a nature without humans.
16:17And talk about the health situation that emerged after Corona
16:20It was said by people from high or wealthy classes.
16:23Like Doki Teork or journalists and activists from the lower middle classes
16:27Nash means
16:28If he is not full, he is not hungry
16:30And a good percentage of the adventurers we talked about at the beginning of the episode
16:33From the families of Walqf
16:34Financially stable, like Christopher
16:36Livanovich says in his book
16:38Whenever a person comes to a developed country, he is close to famine and danger.
16:42His perceptions of nature are always extreme in their romanticism.
16:45That's why, for example, we find people refusing coronavirus vaccines.
16:48These campaigns appear in developed countries where people are seeking natural remedies over industrial ones.
16:54Many women in the developed world choose natural childbirth.
16:57Or natural birth in water
16:59Because she is reassured that there is a capable and strong health system in place.
17:02He should act if something went wrong.
17:03The author also says in his book that he heard an offer from The New Yorker about this tribe in Peru
17:08And how long have they lived normal lives without any artificial intervention?
17:11This makes them healthier and happier
17:13But, my dear, when we went to you, he found mobile phones, electricity, and electrical appliances with them.
17:19That's nice, they have an iPod.
17:20When the two shops were opened, he asked them if they were electrocuted, according to his description, my dear Basoula, son of Obeid.
17:25He told him, "They're definitely on guard, there's no hugging at night, and we can see if there's any danger coming."
17:29They didn't say anything, but the light distracts me from nature, from my love for the stars, and from my connection with the trees.
17:36Console me, uncle, so you can see the monsters that are coming.
17:37By God, my dear Rasi, I spoiled you rotten.
17:40Mohammadi, your accent has changed.
17:41It's just my silliness, my dear, so you'll find me at the beginning of the month with my capital, and at the end of the month I'm a radical communist.
17:47The romantic difference between the New Yorker show and reality is this, my dear.
17:50What is called the commodification of nature
17:52Here we are not approaching nature in a romantic way
17:54We're trying to do it with Adventure Discovery, a service or product.
17:57Consuming it breaks the boredom and routine that modern life inflicts on us.
18:01This tribe is so confused, they're empty-headed and need technology.
18:05But the gallery is not like us.
18:07And we'll go and watch them and say
18:09Wow, something completely original!
18:11As it was, my dear, the rooms were spending time releasing us on the slope in the imsical, your trespass
18:14What are these orientals? Wow
18:16He knows, my dear, that there's one aliśmy bonus smart work
18:18They were there on the wedding night
18:19They were French citizens going to watch
18:21What? Arabs have something called the wedding night?
18:23And we go to empty
18:25We are dear to you and unaware
18:26We see people from the advanced life of Hura Izaz
18:29and recurring food system
18:30And 25% of the population of India and South Asia
18:45They are capable of saying
18:47It is considered environmentally friendly
18:53Only the rich can afford it
18:55That is, according to the 2019 statistics
18:56Half a gallon of milk
18:59Its price exceeds a few dollars
19:00While the same quantity of cow's milk
19:02It costs $2
19:03Even the person who decided to go along with nature and remain a vigan
19:07The last thing he'll bring is Artas Ta'amiya
19:08He won't get an avocado
19:09Didn't he say that the idea of romantic nature
19:11It creates a feeling of guilt, as we said.
19:13But it's a feeling directed entirely in the wrong direction.
19:16In his opinion
19:16Southern countries and the poorest populations suffer the most.
19:19They have climate change, desertification, and famines.
19:21While the most important entities that do this and deserve the credit
19:24They are giant economic entities
19:26The United States are paying
19:28According to Carbon Majors Report
19:3071% of the emissions that caused global warming
19:33Its source is us, not you, my dear.
19:35But it activated 100 companies
19:37Among the most prominent are ExxonMobil, Shell, and Chevron.
19:39The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued the approximation in 2001.
19:42The most significant profits are in the environmental sector, which are projected to reach $45 billion annually.
19:46It didn't come from the activities of environmental groups
19:48Nor individual solutions for the students
19:50It came about through imposing taxes on large companies.
19:53Carbon emission taxes and pollution
19:55And companies also began to protect resources
19:57Like the company Jeddrej, which manages, alongside its main activity, the largest mangrove tree farms.
20:01This is located in Mumbai
20:02It absorbs more than 6000 tons of carbon
20:05All of these, my dear, are solutions geared towards economic entities.
20:07The one responsible for the loss
20:09More than everyone else
20:10Don't try to convince me that Ahmed is the one in Helwan
20:12When he drinks from the straw, he leaves
20:13It will save the environment
20:14My dear, divide the paper you're managing.
20:16In a plastic cup
20:16Yes, dear economic entities
20:18Multinational companies
20:20Be aware, my dear, that the greatest interest of these economic entities
20:23It will transform nature into a romantic concept.
20:25Each one carries it out individually.
20:26We all, as individuals, must be overcome by an individual sense of guilt towards the environment.
20:30And a collective nihilistic feeling that hates humanity
20:32In every time and place
20:34Instead of looking at these entities collectively
20:36We ask her to take responsibility for this.
20:38All, my dear, is increasing romance.
20:39The more we feel guilty
20:41Ahmed prefers to carry a burden in Helwan.
20:43This is the fault of the company that originally made the bag.
20:45He threw his waste in places where it shouldn't be thrown.
20:47In the end, my dear
20:48Nature is not a romantic lover
20:50Rather, it is a spatial area and resources that we are entrusted with.
20:53Our survival depends on preserving it.
20:55And its destruction is not due to us being parasitic creatures.
20:57We are creatures that struggle for survival
20:59Like all creatures
21:00The truth, my dear, is that the person responsible for this statement...
21:02They are entities larger than us
21:03These are economies
21:04It includes companies and governments.
21:07Rich and lived through periods of decline
21:08And then there is enough for its people.
21:10They live, enjoy themselves, and yearn for art.
21:12And the furthest people from experiencing facing nature
21:15face to face
21:15My dear, he's not saying we should be negligent.
21:17Our dealings with the planet
21:18And we do it mockingly and disrespectfully
21:20We throw away what we want.
21:21And that's all we want
21:23All this talk
21:23But it doesn't have to be a trap.
21:25This radical solution
21:26And the extreme vision in his romanticism
21:28To the point that we're trying to eliminate humans from the planet.
21:30The solution lies in our ability to differentiate the distribution of roles and responsibilities.
21:34For large entities
21:36Which, if we actually influence it
21:38We will help the environment
21:39Things won't get better if we go and do a few more rounds in the forest.
21:42The solution lies in changing our production methods and resource management.
21:44In the end, my dear, this too
21:46The efforts of activists in this field cannot be denied.
21:48Because we really need awareness
21:50We kept putting pressure on these companies
21:51If she changes from matches
21:53In short, my dear, all people are sweet and all people are beautiful.
21:56As long as we keep trying and striving
21:59Our lives and the lives of the people around us will be better.
22:01And we'll put it in perspective regarding the lives of the people around us.
22:03Animals, plants, and all countries, God willing.
22:06Last but not least, my dear
22:07Mansi, look at the previous cases.
22:08See the upcoming cases
22:09We spray the traps
22:10And we on YouTube, please subscribe to the channel.