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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
00:02The name of Sana
00:03Your humble servant, Shajarat al-Durr, Pasha
00:05Ha ha ha
00:07Is this a nickname or the name on the ID card?
00:10What's your nickname, sir?
00:11Hey, do you need anything?
00:12Do you need anything?
00:13Pollen only made the house happy
00:15they
00:15What kind of heart?
00:17Contracting and construction, light, sir.
00:20Investigations say
00:21I have very important information.
00:23Information that will benefit us
00:24What information, sir?
00:25I am a tree
00:26It was shaped like this
00:26You'll get tired, Maaki
00:28Show Pati Mohammed
00:30And you won't reveal your secrets
00:31From the other side, by him
00:32I can't speak
00:33The existence of the basis for the criminal path
00:35Family tree lawyer
00:37Are you challenging me?
00:38And I'd like to remind you what
00:39If that clip touches me
00:41The people of Maadi will show you no mercy
00:43Are you going to challenge me, tree?
00:44I
00:45Jabal Abu al-Ward
00:46I am the oldest criminal
00:47Will you choose from a tree?
00:49Okay, I'm not going to kick you out of here.
00:50Until I get to the root of the issue
00:52So what do you think?
00:54With all due respect to the root cause of the issue
00:55Can someone give me a drink?
00:57Because my roots got dry
00:58Cooperate with us
01:00I'll bring you water and everything else you want.
01:03What is your source?
01:03Yes
01:04Member increase
01:05Tell me the truth
01:06My contacts say you're in a relationship with Sandy
01:09Sandy the singer?
01:10What is he in a relationship with?
01:11This is the repentant fan
01:11Sandy the singer, what a tree
01:13Dahila
01:13What should we open?
01:14What do you know about Hurricane Sandy?
01:16Sir, this matter is buried deep inside me.
01:18No matter what happens, I won't be able to speak.
01:20Is this your final word?
01:21Last words
01:21It's up to you to choose.
01:23No! No! No! No! No! No! No!
01:29No! No! No! No! No! No! No! No!
01:41Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you.
01:42Welcome to the new episode
01:43From the Al-Daheeh program
01:44my dear
01:44If God blesses you one day
01:46I went to England
01:46I want you to visit the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford
01:48The museum houses a large number of artifacts.
01:51From the looted Hussein
01:52Look at the drawings of Michelangelo
01:54On the suit of Abu Pocuant
01:55Honestly, my dear, this is connection highs
01:57You have to see it
01:58But in one of the papers of the English Museum
02:00There is a masterpiece beyond price.
02:02Wait, Abu Hamad, don't say "I know".
02:04Who is it, Abu Hamad?
02:04President Biden
02:05President Biden, my dear, is a masterpiece.
02:06The precious masterpiece I'm talking about
02:08It was not a looted masterpiece
02:09But I gave them a donation
02:10This masterpiece is the most famous and expensive she said in the world.
02:13Messia Stadivarias
02:15It was made by the Italian Antonio Stradivari
02:17From more than 300 years
02:18Many musicians consider
02:20One of your best makers ever
02:23And the greatest of them
02:24And his violin shops are played by world-class musicians.
02:26Yo Yo Ma and Bink Al-Zakribin
02:28But even this one is not in his condition.
02:30Yes, Stradiparis too
02:31Simply new
02:32This one hasn't been used since our blind days at Stradivarius.
02:35Which is from the year of the tweet
02:36But if you don't know, that means the literature related to this topic.
02:39The value of this could also reach more than $20 million.
02:43This is a unique and timeless musical masterpiece.
02:46By God, even if it happens again, you won't pay that much.
02:48Because I'm not with you, my dear
02:49Shall I tell you, my dear
02:50I'm telling you this story to tell you about a problem.
02:52In 1999, a problem arose because of this as well.
02:55An official at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York
02:58A taste in the violin
02:59He doubted it was genuine and that it wasn't a Todfries
03:01My dear, this museum specializes in the arts.
03:03That's why someone might evaluate him based on the accusation.
03:05It caused a great controversy
03:06Okay everyone, let's look at two property deeds.
03:08We'll review who sold it to whom and who bought it from whom.
03:10Look at yourself in a paper from 300 years ago
03:13May God help you
03:13You don't even have electricity connections with each other.
03:15It is important, my dear, that this debate remains unresolved for years.
03:17To some extent, more than one researcher in the field of endodochronology
03:20or the science of tree history
03:21If you knew this name correctly, you would be familiar with it.
03:23These scientists met and conducted studies on this as well.
03:26I'll make a dramatic exit and come back as a rapper robot.
03:28Dendochronology, my dear, is a branch of science.
03:31Which is based primarily on a phenomenon we see in many species of trees
03:34This means that it produces a new layer or layer of the tree trunk from the outside every year or every season.
03:40The new layer of onyx is visible on top of the previous print.
03:42And the following year a new layer will come to replace the one before it, and so on and so forth.
03:46That's why, my dear, when you cut down a tree trunk, you see rings inside each other.
03:49These rings are the layers of the trunk that the tree formed on top of each other over the years.
03:53Each tree has its own unique ring shape.
03:55Not every type of tree, no, every tree
03:57Something like a fingerprint or an ID card for the tree
04:00I'm writing to you about this, my dear, so that when the tree demands justice
04:02Every tree, my dear, has its own unique rings.
04:06If you rewatch the episodes, you'll be able to find out.
04:08This tree is about 100 years old and has been in this place for how many years?
04:10Because if the tree grows a new layer every year
04:12The number of rings remains the age of the tree.
04:14When we study these episodes, my dear, in depth and in detail
04:17We would like to know more information about the life of the tree.
04:19For example, the number of episodes we use to estimate the size of the tree each year.
04:23Malakhar, that's how CD and CV are in the tree, we have them now.
04:26She spent all her time in cheese.
04:28My dear, the idea is that we only understand this after we cut down the tree.
04:31Muhammad, with all due respect to the tree and the birth certificate that grew on the tree
04:34And the fish and the comparison that goes up the tree
04:35But I remember in the first episode there was also a masterpiece of hardship and a dialogue going on
04:39We will tell him that I am there
04:40Dear, wait
04:41Faraj, my dear, Arabat Al-Darmiya
04:42Researchers have studied the controversial fate of Strateverius.
04:47So they can say whether this is a genuine Strataverius or not
04:49They analyzed and compared its wood rings to other Stratofirios violins.
04:53They discovered that, in fact, Hazk also had siblings from the same tree.
04:56We have the card.
04:57Thank God I didn't get confused, I found
04:59Listen, piano
05:00The researchers proved this with their words
05:01When they found a great match between the pattern of the rings in the wood
05:04And thus they were able to prove that the Messia Strateverius is indeed a genuine and legitimate Strateverius.
05:09Your strategies are genuine, not fake.
05:12No need to say anything, just go to sleep, Oxford.
05:14My dear, scientific knowledge, which is based on chronology, may seem to me like a stalemate among other sciences.
05:18Honestly, Bahbid, these people have been sitting around for several hours, like tree branches.
05:20They don't choose the corn, meaning
05:21Actually, the issue is much more important and bigger than that.
05:24The science of religion, or chronology, or the study of tree rings.
05:27Not only suitable for joining wood together, as happened in the story of perfection
05:31What does the DNA molecule do?
05:32But he is completely illiterate in understanding some important natural phenomena.
05:36Especially extreme or severe deviations that occur in the climate
05:39drought and heat waves
05:41On the other hand, floods and storms
05:43All this comes from the tree, Ya Bahbid, it turned out to be evil or
05:45My dear, don't be hasty.
05:46My dear, I am about to take you on an expedition that will give you a headache and in which you will discover very dangerous artifacts.
05:52Secrets that could send trees to their doom
05:55The climatic phenomena I mentioned to you a little while ago, my dear
05:58It's very possible that it left devastating effects.
06:00It affects human life, the environment, and the economy.
06:02But given that the D Extreme flowers are originally
06:05It is rare.
06:06And next, her study is something that accompanies
06:07Because you don't have enough data or information about these phenomena.
06:11This is the data you need to create a model
06:12or weather models
06:14You can predict these phenomena before they happen.
06:16But during one of the late-night gatherings at a cafe
06:19Honestly, it wasn't enough, my dear. He was in a bar.
06:20But for the sake of the young viewers
06:22The lawyers don't know that.
06:23Excuse me
06:24Three Dindo-chronology scholars sat drinking and thinking together
06:28One of them was facing a problem
06:29One of them is named Grant Harney from the University of Idaho in the United States.
06:32Grant had a hypothesis or hypothesis
06:34About a pine tree that grows on an island called Big Pine Key
06:37In the state of Florida, USA
06:39But he was not skilled at proving his hypothesis.
06:41When we look at the rings of pine trees in this area
06:43We find a recurring pattern in the tree rings.
06:46The squid consists of thin, strong rings that are close together.
06:48In contrast to other large and wide rings in the rest of the trees
06:52What Grant was trying to prove was that
06:54The years that correspond to these delicate cases are the years in which the tree was under pressure and abused stress.
07:00This stress prevented her from growing properly.
07:03So she makes sweet, big, and fluffy episodes like her other episodes.
07:06What's wrong, tree? It's busy, Selzi, Mama.
07:08Why are you pressuring her, my love? There's a target, but there's no target.
07:09The tree tells you, "No, sir, there's no juice in it."
07:12He told him that there is almost nothing in the nature of this region that can compress the tree and place it under the sedge like the sedge.
07:18Think about it with me
07:19A violent and powerful tornado uproots the tree's leaves and takes its life.
07:23After the hurricane, if the tree is still alive at all, it will be suffering and weak.
07:27She wants someone to give her a sip of water.
07:28When a hurricane hits, the tree emerges from it unable to form a new layer on its trunk.
07:33Just like it used to do in the years when there was no juice.
07:35Therefore, my dear, please note here a very important point: the ring that corresponds to the years of the harvest will be thin because the tree is under stress.
07:43On the ssar
07:43The two researchers who were with Grant were the righteous companions of the late Martha Dominguez Delames and the best of the young researchers in the field of phylogenetic history, Martha Dominguez Delames and Vala Lettreauet.
07:50They suggested collecting all the data on the juices. They thought, "How will you prove this, young people?"
07:56So here he said to you, folks, we will see the years in which there are juices and we will see how big the tree rings are?
08:02If we find that in all the years of the saplings the tree rings remain small, then the saplings are definitively responsible for the size of the ring.
08:11If we find this speech is interlocking, then most likely it contains juice, which is what determines the size of the tree's ring.
08:17Because it contains juice, the ring should be thin when it doesn't; it should be for larger rings.
08:20This is her individuality, this is hypothesis
08:22The tree, in its health, forms a thick ring
08:23They went to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
08:25and the American atmosphere
08:27I won't tell you the name of the department, and I'm not going to give you its address.
08:28Its abbreviation is type
08:29The administration had records of every hurricane that occurred in the Atlantic Ocean.
08:34From 1851
08:35They gathered this data and calculated what happened in the years when hurricanes occurred.
08:39Compare it to the years when the tree made thin rings.
08:42Put these data against these data
08:44Striving for the decisive moment
08:46The data apply to each other exactly
08:49Individualism is correct
08:50Taken was the first evidence of individual health proposed by Gran.
08:52Okay, what does "dah ma aleesh ya Bu Hamad" mean?
08:54That means it's very dry, my dear.
08:55Please pay attention to this very important note
08:56Available data on hurricanes
08:58Its history dates back to 1851
09:00but!!
09:01But the second data is about the trees
09:02For now, she has a mother.
09:04Can you give us information older than 1851?
09:08So, from our current perspective on trees
09:10After we proved, in one way or another
09:13It matches the years in which the juice
09:16So the trees might tell us before 1851
09:19Was there juice or not? When was there juice?
09:21And here Martha came up with a brilliant idea
09:23The Spanish were the first people to make voyages in the Atlantic Ocean.
09:26From Europe to the Americas
09:27You know the story of the Shiyan, my dear.
09:29From the 16th century to the 18th century
09:32They had a precise system for tracking ship convoys.
09:35Those who transport their looted treasures from the recently discovered century
09:38Which is America and then you go to Spain
09:40All the details of these trips were recorded.
09:42Number of fleet ships that reached Spain
09:44The number of ships that sank on the way
09:46Sites, history, and cause of the flood
09:48A detailed archive of all journeys from the year 1495
09:52Its name is the General Archives of the Indian Islands
09:55He thought we were Hind, my dear
09:56They laughed at them in it
09:57If we remove any sunken ships from this data
10:00Due to wars, piracy, fires, or navigational errors
10:04And we're left with only the ships that sank due to hurricanes.
10:06And we compiled a list of the dates on which these ships sank.
10:10We decided on the same comparison as before.
10:12We will compare these dates with the dates of the Ruffian episodes.
10:15The ones in the trees
10:16What could we possibly find?
10:17Another surprise
10:18Another match
10:19The data again matches the tree ring.
10:22Dates on which ships sank due to hurricanes
10:25Our tree has formed thin rings in it.
10:27So the tree rings
10:29You can actually do it for the second time.
10:32She says if it contains juice
10:33No
10:33Thank you, tree rings
10:35I hope to see you in a series
10:36Now we have a new source of information about the history of the juices.
10:39And we say that, but he's just being polite.
10:40We have the trees with us
10:43After all this research effort, my dear
10:45From tree ring analysis
10:47Analysis of Spanish archive data
10:49For travel movement
10:50Maybe someone like you is here, Asker.
10:51Mohammed Maalshi
10:52Are you free?
10:52Why are we putting in all this effort?
10:54It's not like we cut down trees and compared them to all the years in the world.
10:56Why don't you leave the trees alone, uncle?
10:58Years passed from Said Al-Bensaid in the same sentence
11:00Character's name, man, prove it!
11:01The question I'm asking is a dear one
11:02The question is important.
11:02What addition could possibly be so intrusive, oh human?
11:05When we know information about an additional 500 years
11:07In juice data
11:08What we deduced from these tree cases
11:09We know if there were any martyrs there in the year 1220
11:11Oh, my joy!
11:12We'll add it
11:13Currently, dear reader, this data is very important for two reasons.
11:15The first point is that when you grow your databases
11:18The weather models that predict the weather
11:21The result of this model will be more accurate.
11:22Therefore, we can predict the juices
11:24We take precautions against it before it happens.
11:26The second previous one, dear truth
11:27It has nothing to do with juice at all.
11:29Valerie Truitt
11:29One of the three researchers I was talking to you about
11:32She noticed a need to reflect on the graphs.
11:34The one she was working on in this ship research project
11:36Valerie noticed that there was a period
11:37Its duration is approximately seventy years
11:39From 1645 to 1715
11:41There was almost no juice in it.
11:44Or many ships sank due to the storms
11:46That makes her wonder
11:47What does that mean?
11:48What amazing juice! May God bless it.
11:49Working throughout history
11:50And the number of ships that sink
11:52It corresponds to the number of juices
11:53What does this period mean?
11:54Nothing happened in it.
11:55Let me tell you, my dear
11:56If you follow astronomical news
11:58And I know what's happening in the astronomy groups.
12:01WhatsApp, Facebook, and what lies behind them
12:02This period is called the Maunder Menor
12:05Proof to the English astronomer
12:06Edward Maunder
12:07During this period
12:08Maunder detected a very high number of o'alls
12:10What is called Sansputs
12:11or sunspots
12:13This spot
12:13Spots appear on the surface of the sun
12:15Bouhamdar, I don't believe this to be true
12:16I'll go and see for myself.
12:17Sansbots De Aziz Zahra
12:18We see it on the surface of the sun
12:20It is a stain that is burning
12:21It will be colder than the surrounding areas.
12:23Of course, it's cold here.
12:23It doesn't mean completely cold.
12:25Don't misunderstand me
12:25The sun
12:26Sun surface temperature
12:27Approximately 6,000 degrees
12:28This spot is 3,500
12:30Fahmish Smoothie Mangeh means
12:32It's just colder than the surface temperature around it.
12:34Important for reasons not fully understood
12:36There is an increase in merger activity among MPs
12:38What happens inside the sun
12:40Our sun, dear
12:41It becomes active
12:42With the pride of the dialogue
12:42And here the magnetic field suddenly
12:44It increases in a certain way
12:45It blocks the heat from reaching certain areas on the surface.
12:48For some time
12:48So this part cools down
12:50It doesn't get cold again.
12:51It's hot, but less so than the surrounding areas.
12:53naturally
12:53This difference creates dust on the surface
12:55And then an explosion occurred.
12:56Pepan explosions, like solar flares
12:58And emissions emerging from the surface of the sun
13:00Be careful, these flares come from edges, as you can see.
13:03Due to the magnetic field
13:05Look, Jessie
13:05In need
13:06We can detect between 40,000 and 50,000 spots
13:09Every 28 years on the surface of the sun
13:11But during the period of Maunder De
13:12And other types of flakes, meaning
13:14Z John Flamstead and Gian Cassini
13:15Flares were observed during this period
13:17Why approximately 70 years?
13:18Less than 50 spots
13:1950,000, Abu Hamid
13:2050 only
13:21Because it's a link, Abu Hamid
13:22The sun needs to reveal
13:23The sun is really tiring me out
13:24There is no activity
13:25In action, my dear
13:26Active in the sun
13:27I am very serious
13:27This period was called the Maunder Minimum
13:30Abu Hamid asked me less
13:30You're trying to tell me that this period
13:32The sun wasn't as strong as it is now.
13:34That's not all, my dear.
13:35The Maunder Minimum got it during the period
13:36In the age of the Earth
13:37It is heard by someone known as Little Ice Age
13:40or the Little Ice Age
13:42Which began around the sixteenth century
13:43It ended with the beginning of the nineteenth century.
13:46And the rest, my dear, is the little one.
13:46There are so many girls on the ground, my dear
13:48It's colder than now.
13:49During this historical period
13:50And these cold temperatures
13:52It was particularly obvious
13:53In the North Atlas region
13:55During this period
13:56mountain glaciers
13:57or glitchers
13:58I spread out in places like the mountains of the heart
14:00New Zealand
14:01Alaska
14:02South Indies
14:02Average annual temperatures have decreased
14:04In the Northern Hemisphere
14:06By approximately 6 out of 10 degrees Celsius
14:08Compared to average temperatures
14:10In the period between the year 1000 and the year 2000
14:12What's important?
14:13Let's go back to Valari again
14:15The Valari moment
14:16During the maunder period
14:18From the mothers we rarely mention
14:19Less solar activity period
14:21There was practically no juice left in it.
14:23And almost the same
14:24There are no ships other than what's in them
14:26You love juice
14:26He entered because he wondered
14:27Is there a relationship?
14:29Between the juices and the sun's activity?
14:31Are the juices affected?
14:32By death, the swings of the sun?
14:34In reality
14:35Oh, my dear
14:35any?
14:36Yes
14:36When the sun is active
14:37The juices increase
14:38And when the sun isn't active
14:40The juices are getting thinner
14:41So that a hurricane happens, my dear
14:42You need two things
14:42Firstly
14:43The weather
14:44For example, a thunderstorm
14:45Water and air, that's in it
14:46Everything interacts with each other
14:48Then a hurricane appears
14:48So where is the most suitable place for all these things to happen together?
14:51A place with lots of wind and lots of water
14:53Is he at Camp Nou, Hamad?
14:54Gift
14:54I see you're calmer
14:55The most suitable place, my dear
14:57What happened with all these things together?
14:58It is the ocean
14:59actually
14:59Water and a lot of air
15:00Bedfou by the sun's heat
15:02And a thunderstorm too, they'll get a beating.
15:04A thousand times, my dear, you have a hurricane.
15:05The hurricane means
15:06In the period of Anmaun Drmim
15:08The area where solar activity was slightly lower
15:10The ground cooled
15:11Therefore, the oceans are cold
15:12Therefore, I said, "The next juice..."
15:14Because there are almost no more of the same opportunities.
15:16It contains water and hot air.
15:17Therefore, the ships that were sailing in the ocean
15:20She was walking in very calm water
15:22That's why I didn't drown
15:23Because there's no juice
15:24This is what records prove
15:25I was amazed, my dear, I was surprised
15:27Nothing much, Abu Habina. I finished eating and went to sleep.
15:29Wait, my dear, no, I'm telling you I was impressed and surprised.
15:31So you can say yes, and I'll say no, wait a bit longer.
15:33We haven't tasted it yet
15:34Look, my dear, we haven't tasted it yet.
15:36The sweet one hasn't arrived yet
15:37Let me tell you that the matter has consequences
15:40Much more than just ships traveling in peace
15:43The weather was nice.
15:44The oceans are wonderful
15:45Let me tell you, my dear friend, that historically
15:46During the period from 1645 to 1715
15:50This era was marked by very important events
15:52At the level of global economies
15:54The sixteenth century witnessed a period of strong economic expansion.
15:57Which played a major role in political, economic and social transformations
16:01The whole world was given a choice, especially after the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648.
16:05And the one who caused the 30-year war in Europe
16:07And Spain was strongly involved in it
16:09After the restoration, the situation calmed down and people kept the devices because they were working.
16:12The world is beautiful, and there are two new readings that were discovered approximately 150 years ago.
16:16And now we want to go and deal with the prayer there.
16:18And we waste money on resources
16:19Think about what we wanted when we talked about the large travel archive of the Spanish during this period.
16:23These people wanted something that wasn't comfortable, it was paralyzing.
16:24These people weren't going on vacation
16:25The mineral estimates that Spain provided, from New Wirrel to Spain.
16:29In the first 150 years of colonialism
16:31Dear Aziz, count with me
16:32181 tons of gold
16:38And they also took 16,000 tons of waste
16:40The weather was good, the sea was calm, and ships were coming and going.
16:43It all carries a new world, Spain.
16:45Colonialism, one form of colonialism
16:46In 1651, Britain issued its navigation laws.
16:50Which prohibited the use of foreign ships for trade between Britain and its colonies in the New World
16:54This of course led to significant growth in British maritime trade.
16:57And it helped that she had a strong naval fleet
16:59So that it could protect its trade after its colonies there
17:01Did Aziz Al-Zakat heal? Isn't this someone who's a colonialist?
17:03It has to be a car
17:05In 1711, the South Sea Company was founded in England.
17:08So that in the end you can get support from America, just like Spain does.
17:11The same foolishness as the Egyptians: if a project succeeds, we'll open one next to it.
17:14You'll find 4 Centi Street at 6 Ahwa, and they're all working.
17:16This was England's attempt to reduce its debt to Europe.
17:19The English king granted this company the concession.
17:22It allows it to monopolize all trade with Spanish America.
17:25Or what is known in Spanish as America
17:27Which is the game of Mexico and Central America
17:29And South America now
17:30Caribbean region
17:31With the trade
17:31Salaries and money increased rapidly.
17:33It remains essential that we establish a central bank.
17:35In order to manage all of the state's funds
17:37Indeed, in the year 1694
17:39Bank of England was established
17:41The world's first central bank
17:42The one who was responsible for issuing the bank note
17:44And also, managing the money supply in England.
17:47Europe's trade link with the world
17:49It began to flourish and integrate during this period
17:50This could be one of the strongest periods of economic growth.
17:53What Europe has witnessed in its modern history
17:55As for the merchants
17:56The goods they brought from the Americas
17:58They do not buy it
17:59Let me tell you, my dear
18:00The majority of European citizens
18:01He didn't know about things like tobacco and sugar.
18:04and cocoa
18:05The important thing, my dear
18:06After the voyages of exploration and trade
18:08What Europe did across the ocean
18:09And I went to the Americas and brought her uncle
18:11We have a civilization that has existed for thousands of years.
18:12And the two continents are still doing well.
18:14And from here, my dear people, my secrets began to be revealed
18:15There were still merchants with money.
18:17The need arose to devise new methods.
18:19To regulate production, industry, and trade processes
18:23And indeed, traders and businessmen began to stay there.
18:25and Bankers
18:25Every country is a song
18:26And with them, unprecedented amounts of capital.
18:29One of the historians says the 16th and 17th centuries
18:31They are the true beginning of Western capitalism.
18:33These developments, my dear
18:34She is the one who shaped our modern world today.
18:36Growth in trade and commercial exchange during this period
18:38They are the ones who established the shape of the global economy.
18:40What we know now
18:41The emergence of a new economic power in Europe
18:43Capital growth encourages competition and innovation.
18:47They pushed economic growth forward
18:49Was this a good thing to build from?
18:50And it wasn't a good thing
18:51This is a different program altogether.
18:52This economic boom
18:53It improved people's living standards.
18:55In all of the world's neighborhoods
18:56All of this, my dear,
18:58No, Abu Ahmed
18:58Because of this economic development
19:00no
19:00Because the sun is a comforting thing
19:04Sun activity as a comfort
19:05simple sloppy
19:06Put the umbrella down, it will take up capital.
19:08And I am amazed
19:09Of course, my dear.
19:11There must be factors other than the sun.
19:12It explains the Little Ice Age
19:14During which the mound minimum occurred
19:16Some researchers say
19:17The Little Ice Age
19:18It happened due to a burglary.
19:20Large quantities were produced
19:21From Sani gas, caprylic oxide
19:22In the air
19:23And this gas
19:23It causes a decrease in Earth's temperature.
19:26But if solar activity were lower
19:27And how does the sun produce energy?
19:29This is a decrease in temperatures on Earth.
19:31Even if it's because of these gases
19:33It is likely to be larger
19:35Some people, my dear, without mentioning names
19:36You can take this mind minimum topic
19:38In another place
19:38And they say
19:39Well, what if the sun
19:40It is what affects the Earth's temperature
19:41In this way
19:42Fata means
19:43Global warming is not real
19:44When the sun is a little less active
19:46The ground cooled
19:46But after a while
19:47It will return to normal.
19:48And now
19:49Temperatures are rising
19:50Because she increased her activity a little, or something like that.
19:53Simply put, my dear, some people interpret
19:54The global warming we are experiencing right now
19:56It's not because of him
19:57Exhausts
19:58gases
19:59and petroleum
19:59and coal
20:00All this talk
20:01The reason is
20:02Our sun makes a cycle
20:04There's a lot of activity now.
20:05Come on, lots of activity!
20:06The heat is intense
20:07and a little
20:08Things like this happen to us
20:09Little Ice Age
20:10And the heat cools
20:19This decrease is less than one degree
20:20For nearly seventy years
20:22But if we turn to God
20:23On average temperature rise
20:25on the surface of the earth
20:26From the fifties
20:27Up until now
20:27We will find that the height has reached a full degree
20:30At the same time
20:31The amount of solar energy
20:32The earth receives it
20:34It's decreasing in origin
20:34This period we are in
20:36The solar energy that reaches us
20:37It's really getting worse
20:38Yes
20:39So what are we supposed to do?
20:40We are raising the temperature
20:41The young man turned on the air conditioning
20:42He buys Hummer cars
20:44And he rides airplanes
20:44And he opens factories
20:45And it has growth
20:46And my economy is working
20:48And the percentage of Bitcoin
20:49Facebook and Google servers
20:50And here, Aziz, there's a funny paradox.
20:52Low temperatures
20:53Capitalism worked
20:54Capitalism
20:55You're being silly
20:56Then the heat is generated on it
20:57Okay, dear, that's what I mean
20:57The sun originally
20:58They haven't put pressure on us yet.
20:59This heat we are living in
21:01It has nothing to do with the sun.
21:02We are the ones who made it
21:03The sun is still in the authorities stage
21:04She hasn't come in yet.
21:05The flower is naturally rare
21:06Juice
21:07heat waves
21:08and drought
21:09Floods
21:09It won't be a rare find, any more
21:10It is very likely that this is
21:12Newell's Shape
21:13It means in the future
21:14Places that were outside the juice belts
21:15You will get involved in it
21:16Mediterranean Sea
21:17Its coasts, for example
21:18What I'm telling you means
21:19It is possible in the future
21:19Not far off at all
21:20Naniya the hurricane
21:21On the coasts of Greece
21:22Or the islands of Malta and Sicily
21:23Or the hurricane in Alexandria
21:24and the coast
21:25All this, my dear
21:26We still haven't gotten serious.
21:27So, our Lord, grant us authority over the province.
21:28That's all, my dear.
21:29Our brother, not "O my brother"
21:30Let's look at the previous case.
21:31Let's see what happens next.
21:32We download Egypt on sources
21:33We went to YouTube
21:33Subscribe to the channel
21:34And look at the tree ring
21:35You've been talking nonsense since the moment you said it
21:36If there are juices, you'll be on the coast.
21:38And here the heart contracts a little quickly
21:39I won't be able to go to that place again.
21:40Please, my brother
21:41That's what was stopping you
21:42juices
21:43You already know about this.
21:44Khalash, please don't talk about it.
21:45Suhaila is watching me right now
21:46Okay, you, Suheila's guy