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فسيلة - transplant
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00:00Honestly, I don't know what's keeping me patient with you all this time, Diab.
00:03Can I know why my girlfriend is so upset and yelling at me?
00:05I should have listened to my father.
00:07I see the wedding that he brought me
00:09He composed it and it's ready from all of them.
00:12I smell a stench of disrobing
00:13Your father's ways will never change.
00:15Diab
00:16Speak about Baba properly
00:18Oh house, be patient with me for two days.
00:20I am the herd's shepherd
00:22And the hour of your taking me away
00:23No one should block our path
00:25I smell the scent of that old, smoky woman I hear every day.
00:28No, that's the scent of a gazelle, and I really want to hug you, but you came too late.
00:32Be more considerate, don't be so funny.
00:34You'll remain passive and your legs will be between your legs your whole life
00:37no
00:37If you behave yourself, I'll leave you alone.
00:40I already have enough problems.
00:41no
00:42Wait, Diab
00:43I'm not dreaming about anything
00:45However, my puppies will carry your name.
00:47Enough, house, stop howling.
00:48I mean, am I reading?
00:50What is my soul doing to the puppies that are awake?
00:52We raise them together in a clean manner
00:54In your upbringing
00:55Oh Diab
00:57And we'll take them to the hunting club.
00:58Just like we've always dreamed
01:00And we sing them our love song every day
01:02aow aow aow aow aow aow aow aow aow aow aow aow aow
01:07Okay, and you're waiting, Diab?
01:09I'm six years old now.
01:11And my father won't wait any longer for her.
01:13You don't know about this decision issue, and you're just making a fool of yourself.
01:16Okay, look, to be honest
01:17Without beating around the bush
01:18You know me by nature and by heart
01:20Honestly, I can't bear to be apart from my mom these days.
01:22The six is ​​big
01:23And then the fever
01:24I'll leave her to the right
01:25God
01:26Are you telling me this, my love?
01:28After you kept me by your side all this time
01:30It's up to you, Diab
01:32Nour Oyoun Diab
01:33I'm leaving
01:34Find yourself a dog
01:38The Levantine is comfortable and unique
01:52Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to two new episodes of the Al-Daheeh program.
01:56In the 19th century, the English writer Ruthier Kipling published his novel The Jungle Book
02:00The one who is a hero, Bockley
02:01The little child who is separated from him
02:02He was raised in the forests of India amidst the scorpions
02:04Yesterday, the novel's role in the year 1872
02:06A group of hunters went on a hunting trip in the forests of northern India.
02:10They saw a flock of squirrels with them; it was strange.
02:13The flock spotted the hunters and disappeared into their den.
02:16The hunters approached the cave and lit a fire at the entrance.
02:18So take possession of a cave filled with smoke and heat.
02:20The wolves inside escaped
02:22The story is different
02:22Some say that the fishermen killed him.
02:24And there are those who say that the fishermen captured him.
02:26But they are surprised to find that one of the members of this herd
02:28Tear up Lahbu Hamid, a dog and a hyena
02:30They had with them a human boy walking on all fours
02:32He doesn't speak, but he howls and growls.
02:35They took this boy who hadn't sought refuge
02:36There, the name Sani Shar is used, which is an Urdu word meaning Saturday.
02:40This might lead you to think that Mowgli is a story based on Sunny Shar
02:42This could be true because Kiplin lived in the British colonies in India.
02:46Maybe he heard about it, and maybe we're mistaken.
02:48Because when the story of Sunny Shar spread
02:50Irish geologist Valentine Burle
02:52I sent a message to the person in charge of the shelter.
02:54He tells him, "What can I say? Tell me more about the story of the child who grew up among the gold."
02:58The man responded with a very strange reply.
03:00This one means that I have more than one child with this recipe.
03:02If you mean the boy they took out of the smoke-filled room
03:05The boy formed a bond with one human being.
03:07He was another child who was also found in the forest.
03:10During the same period, four children were reported with the Wolf Children
03:13Over the years, others began to appear.
03:15Like the historical case of the Amala and Kamala
03:18My sister, you're like a guardian now, Siri
03:20The cubs that were raised with a wolf and her pups
03:22They would go out with her to drink from the river in the same way she did.
03:25Those of us who, when they took the okra, would prefer to chat about their colleagues.
03:28They were behaving like wild animals
03:30For example, Sinchar used to drink like a dog.
03:31It can't tolerate the touch of the hudud
03:33He smells anything before eating it.
03:34He's burning the meat with water
03:36And he sharpened his teeth on the edge of the sword.
03:37Lacking human traits like laughter and smiling
03:39Of course, these cases have baffled scientists.
03:41Their questions about our culture and human characteristics were impactful.
03:44Language developers and all that stuff
03:45Honestly, my dear, I was telling you this story to strengthen your resolve.
03:48You succeeded, Abu Hamid, congratulations!
03:49What do you want to say?
03:50Honestly, my dear, you want to talk about wolves now?
03:51The predators that, when they saw a child
03:53Instead of seeing him as a victim, they offered him care.
03:56The company
03:57Even Abu Hamid, we are not all compassionate beings.
03:58You're just like that because you live in the city.
04:00My dear, if I were to meet you, it would be on the street.
04:01You'll keep feeding and raising it until it grows up and becomes a chick, then you can feed it.
04:04But the wolves that I heard about were ahead of her in their attacks on humans and pedestrians.
04:08The evidence is on Little Red Riding Hood's clothing.
04:11We haven't forgotten, by the way.
04:12But let me tell you, you made a lot of mistakes about animals.
04:14It's mostly not close to the truth.
04:16Wolves came upon us, and we are poor people.
04:18The organization, my dear, says that wolves adopt children that are not their own.
04:21And sometimes not the same species at all
04:23Such behavior is rare in sadism.
04:25Why not?
04:26Why adopt an individual from another species?
04:27This is something we don't understand.
04:28It wastes time, effort, and energy to an absurd degree.
04:31He ate himself and his first children
04:32And peace be upon you if it was Oop
04:34So its milk is supposedly reserved for people who own it.
04:35He will go to a stranger
04:36And I hope that after that, he will remove her name or even her genes.
04:39He will have no role in any flock he goes to
04:41This came from different people with completely different genes.
04:43But what's unique about wolves is their appreciation for family.
04:45This isn't romantic talk.
04:46There is no place in the world for a lone wolf.
04:48The life of the pack is essential for the survival of wolves.
04:50Wolves help each other with raising their young
04:51Perboa, the second wolf cubs
04:53Instead of being left to die, they are separated from the herd.
04:55To increase the genetic diversity within the herd
04:58And this inclusion, as we have seen, extends to children of other types.
05:01And let me tell you, the wolf won't hesitate to push his way into the pack.
05:04If you feel me, my dear, I will be very careful.
05:05Look at the wolves living among us
05:07Huh? We're waiting for wolves, Muhammad.
05:08Oh my dear, you must have seen Maharda
05:10And my dear, he's of average height, walks on all fours, and says he
05:12Isn't that the dog?
05:13Yes, my dear dog
05:14The dog, my dear, is considered a type of wolf.
05:16Look at his good looks, his morals, his understanding, and his loyalty to his friend.
05:19He defends it relentlessly.
05:20More difficult for the logic of nature to comprehend.
05:23The traits found in these dogs are merely an extension of the wolves' loyalty to their packmates.
05:27Wolves share almost the same nuclear energy as domestic dogs.
05:31Which there is no doubt descends from the Romaid wolves
05:33Canslopes, some of which were domesticated between approximately 14,000 and 29,000 years ago
05:37And they produced dogs of various breeds, whose scientific names
05:39Canslopes Families
05:41tame wolves
05:42There's another type of wolf, my dear, that we haven't encountered yet.
05:44It's the Ethiopian wolf that lives in the highlands of Ethiopia, and it looks more like a can.
05:47Only 500 people remain.
05:49As for the Consoles, their number reaches 250,000
05:52It contains 40 subtypes.
05:54Subspishes are small in size.
05:56We have people living in the Middle East, the sorcerers.
05:57Arabian wolf costume in Saudi Arabia, Sinai, and Palestine
06:00Jordan and Syria
06:01The larger species, however, remain in the northern regions of Asia and North America.
06:05And countries with longer legs and killing by the Arab wolf
06:07The first humans who used to eat them
06:09They were very impressed by the wolves and began trying to imitate them.
06:12Scientists believe that humans originally learned to hunt from wolves.
06:14And they felt, as you might say, a sense of familiarity with them.
06:16Because their senses resembled them
06:17They succeed through cooperation and suffer from loneliness.
06:19The wolves' hunting talents have produced hunting dogs.
06:22And her confidence stems from the fact that she will know her area and defend it.
06:25They produced guard dogs for us
06:26In fact, my dear, wolves are nothing but dogs.
06:29She decided that she would continue her life in Al-Buraqiyah
06:31If we were to mention this herd
06:32It consists of six to ten individuals
06:34And sometimes they can reach twenty wolves
06:36They have strong social ties
06:37These are the things that keep the herd together
06:39But if one of them were to become a wolf, he would be harmed.
06:41So they take care of them
06:42And they are considerate of the elderly.
06:43And this, my dear
06:44Because the wolves are older
06:46And more experts in age
06:47They pass on their knowledge from generation to generation.
06:49Even if they lost a companion
06:50They are the source of suffering and grief over those they have lost.
06:53The wolf pack rules a large area.
06:55Its area ranges from 260 square kilometers
06:57Up to 2500 square kilometers
06:59No stranger can infiltrate his territory.
07:01He won't try to hunt prey.
07:03But it's also possible under certain circumstances to get wet
07:05As we said
07:06If, for example, it was a small wolf
07:07We can take it and raise it.
07:08Because of generational diversity
07:09But of course, the area they live in
07:11Sometimes it changes because there's no food or no water.
07:13Wolves travel
07:14If you came, you would sit on the skeleton of a wolf
07:16You'll find that these are creatures created for travel and migration.
07:19Her legs are long and her chest is deep.
07:21And her feet are large
07:22The werewolf is about the same size as a human hand.
07:24You can walk up to 20 kilometers in one day
07:26Jay's speed is not skilled
07:27But they demonstrate their resilience.
07:30Okay, no worries, Abu Ahmed
07:31How do wolves this many communicate with each other?
07:32Especially in large quantities
07:34They communicate, my dear, through love letters.
07:36Body position and urine
07:37This is body language, Abu Ahmed
07:39Yes
07:39This is in addition to, of course, the signs of smell and sound.
07:41Especially howling
07:43Every wolf has a different howl.
07:45Like a fingerprint
07:47The variety of howling sounds helps the group
07:49She prefers continuous
07:50They sold to gather the flock and find each other's locations
07:53A flock of hyenas, ewes, and bananas
08:11Oh, my father, these words are difficult for me.
08:13Look at their pictures
08:13Expert in graphics
08:14The accountant calculates everything
08:15All your little ones are with me
08:16When this minute finishes off the prey
08:18He doesn't eat it in moderation.
08:19Every wolf, my dear, can eat 9 kilograms in one sitting.
08:23They have no table fringes
08:24However, the alpha wolf is the one who eats first.
08:27Abu Hamid, they have class distinctions.
08:28In Alpha and in Mesh Alpha
08:30And if they are like that, why did we love them?
08:32Oh Ahwa
08:32This is a strategy to get the wolves to cooperate.
08:34To the fullest extent possible in hunting and defending their territory
08:37There needs to be someone to raise them.
08:38They have a social structure from time immemorial
08:40rigid hierarchy
08:42At the top of this sequence
08:43Or a pair of shriveled wolves
08:45Alpha miles and alpha in miles
08:47The only countries that grant them the right to marry
08:49Alpha marries Alpha
08:50After them, there will be fewer wolves in power.
08:52Researchers call them beta wolves
08:54Their presence is important to the flock because, as you might say...
08:56They remain second in command
08:57The beta wolf participates in hunting.
08:59His word carries weight with the entire pack, including this alpha.
09:01When the alpha gets infected or dies
09:03He is the one who acts on his behalf
09:04This is because facing the prey sometimes causes distress.
09:08In the claim and the skulls
09:09And sometimes it causes wounds
09:10The father means that the alpha is relying on God.
09:12That's how life goes.
09:13The dead will grow up and take his place as the alpha.
09:15This applies to both males and females.
09:17This means that Miss Beta could remain the pack leader if the Alpha dies.
09:20But in this society, the males dominate the males.
09:23Females dominate females
09:24After Beta comes the Omega Wolf category
09:27American naturalist Jamie Deutscher
09:29And her husband, Jim Deutscher
09:30Those who have studied the behavior of the swine for years
09:32They collaborated on seven books about the Zakab
09:34They divided the Zakab into three categories of countries
09:35Alpha
09:36Beta
09:36Omega
09:37Where Omega led me to the road
09:38These countries, my dear, are the scapegoats of the herd.
09:41Zakab is subject to Piotr's cutting, if he counts an alpha
09:43They wait for the food to fall off
09:44After the rulers eat the sweet meat
09:46The countries of the unemployed are from the society of the Zakab
09:47It's not right for them to have bonds with each other like alpha.
09:50Because basically they don't have the right to get married
09:52Or they can make a decision on their own.
09:53Of course, Abu Hamid, no problem.
09:54This sequence is eternal
09:55It doesn't change, meaning
09:56Safat Wir brought them down from the first day
09:58They descended into it on the ground
09:59No, my dear
09:59This system is very likely to change
10:01Sometimes a wolf from a small ravine
10:03He gets fed up with his situation.
10:04Viathor on Alpha
10:05This happens in a few battles.
10:06But because herd stability is essential for survival
10:09Both of them need to be fixed.
10:11In a study I dealt with from 2008 to 2009
10:13On two sets of zakab
10:14Researchers recorded the behavior of the skunks after battles
10:16They linked it to their behavior at a certain time during the conflict.
10:19They found it, my dear
10:19The following after the battle
10:21She is the one who reconciles the dominant powers.
10:23By not touching or licking their noses
10:25Researchers believe that touching the nose
10:27It's the way a younger person apologizes to an older one.
10:29And the more intense the fighting became
10:31The more friendly the behavior after that
10:33So, my dear, they don't hit each other.
10:34They love each other more
10:35After that, I mean
10:36Of course, it's the weak who love the big one.
10:37The issue, my dear, is that there is a kind of hypocrisy involved.
10:39And a type of class system
10:40Which we are trying to beautify
10:42Just as we always beautify the animal world
10:43And sometimes the submissive wolf
10:45He wakes up lying on his back
10:46And the second tail between his legs
10:47Zizi, he didn't just submit like that.
10:49This exposes his greatest weakness to the world.
10:52His stomach and throat
10:54He exposes them to the wolf who controls him.
10:55As a sign, I am surrendering myself.
10:56I'm not selling weapons
10:57This acknowledgment happens
10:58To maintain the hierarchy
11:00The one who maintains order
11:01Who gets the votes and who doesn't?
11:02Who eats first and who eats last?
11:04Who will we cooperate with and who will we advise?
11:05And with this system
11:06The one that doesn't leak water
11:08and the complex social structure
11:10One day, the wolf decided...
11:11He leaves the flock and never returns.
11:13He travels outside the region alone.
11:15This is a phenomenon known as the lone wolf.
11:17or color and wolf
11:17This wolf can travel hundreds of kilometers
11:20Until he migrates from his region
11:21This wolf abandoned his group
11:23It means he gave up protection
11:25The one who owns this flock
11:26Maybe, my dear, he'll find a beach
11:28So they killed him
11:28Or he might encounter other wolves
11:29So they killed him
11:30Or he might encounter predators
11:31and prey
11:31Maybe to find a safe meal
11:33He walks hundreds of miles
11:34Or it circles around other wolf-infested areas.
11:36He is Bishamsham all the time
11:37So that he doesn't overstep the boundaries of his territory.
11:39They also don't howl
11:40Because of the howling
11:41Why might it attract attention?
11:42That's why foreigners have
11:43One of the well-known interests of the color and Wolf
11:45They say about the independent person
11:46Those who prefer isolation
11:47He's forging his own path
11:48Not attached to anything emotional
11:50Like having a family or a lover
11:52Or even the owners
11:52But in the wolves
11:53The opposite is true
11:55Studies say
11:55This type of wolf
11:57Very treacherous quality
11:58Fifteen percent only
11:59From the wolves of the world
11:59They are lone wolves
12:01They are the exception, not the general public.
12:02And also, what the lone wolf is looking for
12:04It's just another wolf
12:05We, Abu Ahmed, are saying this
12:06Do you believe he's trying to form a new group?
12:09What a fight
12:10Independent and self-reliant
12:12And he wants to live alone like that?
12:14Researcher Eric Zee, a specialist in Sloughi
12:17In the dogs and wolves, he says
12:18Sometimes
12:19Food is scarce in the area
12:20The hostility of the herd remains within it.
12:21small animals
12:22Those who are not up for the competition
12:24You go
12:24She walks
12:24From the age of one or two, for example
12:26Or there might be a small wolf
12:28He is being bullied by a large wolf
12:30So he physically harmed him
12:31And they don't let him eat
12:32All of this, my dear
12:32It could be motives
12:33But she is not the reason
12:35The real reason for leaving
12:36It is the spread
12:37The wolf abandons the pack
12:38So that he can go
12:39The flock is lavender.
12:40And colonizes a new area
12:42And he and the young lady he's going to meet will remain.
12:43New herd leaders
12:44The bomber, my dear
12:45This herd system
12:46There is no dictatorial context in it.
12:48American biologist
12:49David Misch
12:49Specialist in the study of wolves
12:51He says that the term
12:52The dominant wolf or alpha wolf
12:53What is said about the leader of the wolf pack
12:55This is a misleading term
12:56Because I have a feeling that this alpha wolf
12:58I breathe, I fight, I hit right, I hit left
13:02So that he can be the leader of the flock
13:03Oh my dear, I need
13:04It only happens in prison.
13:05Why are these wolves still locked up?
13:06But the truth
13:07The one who reached the alpha wolf
13:08It remains alpha
13:09It is permissible and has produced people
13:11They remained the members of the herd
13:12In short, the man of the house remained
13:13The herd consists of families.
13:14From fathers and sons of sisters
13:16And possibly some uncles and aunts as well
13:19And sometimes strange wolves
13:20The flock agreed to include her
13:22Why the lone wolf?
13:23He doesn't marry within the same herd.
13:24This is even the wolf territory
13:26two thousand kilos
13:27They are the first and the last
13:28Nineteen wolves
13:29Dunya bil-Zahba, meaning
13:30Why all this fuss?
13:31Let me tell you
13:31The wolf in his pack
13:32If it is permissible
13:33He will marry a relative.
13:34And I don't need to tell you, my dear
13:35What does marrying a relative do?
13:37It causes poverty in the genes
13:38Because I'm serious, my dear
13:38The wolf meets the she-wolf
13:40They try to choose different colors, some
13:42Why does he marry someone from another herd?
13:44He takes good qualities from him
13:45larger body
13:46Stronger immunity
13:47Faster lists
13:47Ashras railway
13:48Or it doesn't have to be a better quality
13:50It might just be a different characteristic
13:52Genetic diversity
13:541893
13:55A professional syad and a naturalist
13:57His name is Ernest Thompson
13:58He arrived in New Mexico
13:59To complete a task she had
14:01In a wolf out of law
14:02The locals called it Lobo
14:03Lobo was a gray wolf
14:05He was forced to prepare the livestock
14:06After human colonies
14:08It killed its natural prey
14:09An agreement was reached with Thompson
14:10For a reward of one thousand dollars
14:12Opposite Ras Lobo
14:13Group leader
14:14You only have two weeks left.
14:16And bring me Lobo's head
14:17Thompson wrote his story with Lobo
14:19He published it in a book entitled
14:20Wild Animals I Have Known
14:21Put five pieces of bait in it
14:23Pious poisoned animals
14:24He carefully covered his human scent.
14:26And put this bait in the Lobo area
14:27The next day
14:28The five poisoned animals disappeared
14:30Thompson predicted that Lobo had died.
14:31Because the animals contained poison
14:33But, my dear
14:34After a period
14:34He found that the taste was all
14:36Covering it in a pile of feces
14:37It's as if the wolf is telling him
14:39Play something else
14:47Explore all the traps
14:48Trap trap
14:49The task that was supposed to be completed in two weeks
14:51I stayed with her for more than four months
14:52Four months of failed attempts
14:54And on the nights
14:55During Thompson's research
14:56Lobo's footprints were tracked
14:58And beside her, he found the footprints of a smaller wolf.
15:00And here, my dear, is my point of weakness.
15:02His companion
15:02White lion, also known as Blanca
15:03Betati Thompson carries other traps
15:05It targets it
15:06My darling, my heart, Señora Blanca
15:08The various traps, these heads, what they point to
15:09And in action, my dear
15:10Blanca falls into the trap
15:11When Blanca falls into the trap
15:12Thompson goes to the trap and looks at it.
15:14So Lobo finds her next to it
15:15And she is on the ground, trimming
15:17Lobo when he saw the humans coming
15:18Running the distance is safe
15:19So that he could keep an eye on them
15:20He saw them surrounding his beloved
15:21They kill her and drag her away with their horses.
15:23Thompson is talking
15:24It is a favor that hears the cries of Lobo
15:26For two days
15:26The satisfied one is high and united
15:28Long, sad, and full of heartache
15:30And after the people disappeared
15:31Lobo kept walking behind
15:33Siege of Blanca
15:33Until he reached the farm
15:35Those who were imprisoned there, their punishment.
15:36The sadness that was in him
15:37What affected his sense of caution
15:38I didn't realize that the satisfying taste
15:39Blanca's stencil
15:40On January 31, 1894
15:42Lobo was arrested
15:43Because sovereignty was locked on his four legs
15:45Despite his injuries
15:46But when he saw the fisherman
15:47He stopped and continued in the obstacles
15:48Thompson and his men
15:49Gather your mouths
15:50And they put him on the horse
15:51They took him to the farm
15:52They bound him and tied him up in his kingdom
15:53The one who controlled it for years
15:54He refused to eat
15:55Or even if he comes to you
15:56Thompson the Truth
15:56Try to keep Blubo alive
15:58But it is said that Lobo died four days later.
16:01Not from injuries
16:02But from sadness
16:02Thompson kept Lobo's fur
16:04The one who moved after that
16:05For a museum in New Mexico
16:06He wrote his story
16:06Which contributed to changing viewpoints
16:08Towards wild animals
16:09The reason was that with the end of the twentieth century
16:11There are policies in place to protect wildlife.
16:14Programs to reintroduce wolves to the wild
16:15and protect it
16:16Wolves, by their very nature, pose a danger.
16:18But there's a big difference
16:19We avoid them and defend our property.
16:21He explained that it should include a sport to defeat wolves.
16:23He explained that there remains a sport for taming wolves.
16:26And it remains a source of pride among people.
16:27In extermination campaigns that occurred
16:28The wolf was absent in some areas
16:30paved the way for extinction
16:30That's just my imagination, dear.
16:31What are we doing in the wolf?
16:32The wolf who was able to contain children
16:34Just like what happened in the Len
16:35As if they were an individual from their herd
16:36Wolves are beautiful
16:37They drew their strength from their enemies.
16:39And they developed into families
16:40They have a full emotional life
16:41They play and they love
16:42They are raising their young ones
16:43And they grieve for their dead
16:44They have different personalities, just like us.
16:46Some of them are judges
16:47And some of them are dinner
16:48And some of them are adventurers
16:48We are two beings
16:50Territorial
16:50They sold out in order to claim their region.
16:52And we are developing our area
16:53With wire mesh and borders
16:54Even wolves kill wolves
16:56In wars of influence
16:56It is the first natural cause
16:58Death of the wolves
16:58And humans are like that too.
17:00We as humans
17:00The people who kill the most people
17:02on the planet
17:02And according to the opinion
17:03Rick Lam for you
17:03Is there a book?
17:05We and the wolves
17:06He loves the same meat
17:07Cows, sheep, and deer
17:09This could be the real cause of the conflict.
17:11Oh Risso, oh Bahmad
17:11This whole battle is a battle over the spoils.
17:13Unfortunately, my dear
17:14This is the real reason for the conflict.
17:15Executing wolves is not just an injustice.
17:16But it was never a solution.
17:17To the end of this battle
17:18Studies that dealt with the impact
17:20Remove predators
17:21I'm sure it rarely succeeds
17:22The most famous example
17:23When the farmers complained
17:24The leopards are sheep
17:26In South Africa
17:27They executed them all.
17:28The results showed that this was ultimately
17:29Increased losses in livestock
17:3127%
17:32Because, my dear
17:33As we saw in one of the episodes before
17:35Predators are an essential part of the ecosystem
17:37They control the number of frice
17:39and small predators
17:40The dress of the corner and the wedding
17:41The ecosystem is a complex network.
17:43And the services it provides to us
17:44It's irreplaceable
17:45It is wise to preserve it.
17:46The solution, my dear, is coexistence.
17:48We build secure enclosures
17:49And they carved it with high walls.
17:50We respect their nature
17:51So they won't have to attack us.
17:52But my dear
17:53The genocide will ultimately backfire on us.
17:55Because the more we know
17:56All we realize is that the she-devil of predators
17:58And antagonizing them is not in our best interest.
17:59We respect that they are part of the system
18:01Those who preserve our lives and well-being
18:03That's all, my dear.
18:03If you are a Bizip, please
18:04See the previous cases
18:05See the upcoming cases
18:06Go down and look at the sources
18:07We are on YouTube
18:07Subscribe to the channel
18:08You know, my dear, that Lobo
18:09When he filed a lawsuit
18:10On the people who have been led by her, if she loves him
18:11Do you know who he talked to?
18:12Of course I know, my dear, that I'm a lawyer.
18:13Is it him, Ya Bahmad?
18:14money
18:14There's a lot of youth expected, my friend.
18:16But my skills in snake throwing
18:18I couldn't handle the craftsmanship of the time, Taj
18:20I'm exercising a little

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