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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:00I'm glad we finally met
00:03Tell me about yourself, Salah
00:04What do you like to do in my life?
00:05I swear, I'm learning magic these days.
00:07Do you see?
00:08Is this for real?
00:09Are you going to get me?
00:11Are you ignoring me?
00:12Get out of here, Salah!
00:13By the way, that was sleight of hand
00:15Oh Salah, that's too much
00:19Not every time you see me, you move forward.
00:20That's it, I swear I won't propose to you again.
00:22Maryam, are you going to ignore me?
00:24Damn you, who is this?
00:26This is my chef friend.
00:27I performed surgery on him so that he would become young
00:28Did you see?
00:29God willing, here's what I've submitted.
00:30Get out of here, Salah
00:31Maryam, can we get a thousand thousand pounds so we can bring back the honorable one again?
00:33Oh feathers and love
00:33Is it okay if you get over it like I am?
00:35Get out of here, Salah!
00:37You and your lookalike, Salah
00:41Salah, you're like a brother to me, understand now.
00:43Is this your final word?
00:44Yes, Salah, and please, enough with the surprises.
00:46okay
00:47Excuse me, I'm going to the porter.
00:48Oh, of course, go ahead.
00:52Borrow, don't pull, take advantage
00:55He is afflicted with calamities, for he is weak.
01:03Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of the Dabke program.
01:09This, my dear, is not just a joke, but a joke according to your money.
01:11Of course, my dear, you'll be scrolling down the timeline one day.
01:14That romantic scene from the movies, the one about the pros, hit you.
01:18The young man from the village gets down on his knees, takes a small box out of his pocket, and opens it.
01:22He asks his girlfriend, "Are you going to leave me?"
01:24And despite the fact that they had been friends for ten years, and she made a point of telling him every fifteen minutes that it wasn't the right time to be a little late and needed to come over
01:31These things work, you'll be surprised
01:33The scene ended in love, romance, and harmony.
01:36God willing, a passport
01:37Hsiwa, the picture is beautiful
01:38Romance, love
01:40Did Haley stop there?
01:41And the one who zoomed in on the ring did so for one
01:42What's that? Diamonds?
01:43Zoom in on this diamond
01:44I wonder if there was an engagement ring before.
01:47Step back a little?
01:48The possibility of encountering the Almaz wall in India.
01:50One of the most famous diamond exporting countries in the world
01:52But it's also possible that it was smuggled through India.
01:54If you look further back, you'll find she's evading Congo
01:57Nor the Sierra Leoneans
01:58And you'll find that the Almaz Cute wall has a history of being beautiful.
02:01And in order for it to emerge from the depths of the earth until it reaches the hands of the girl who is getting engaged
02:05Many people were shocked by her.
02:06Maybe if I went back further
02:08If I went back in time a little further
02:10You might find it before it's in the girl's hands.
02:12I was in the hands of a cute African child
02:14You are now a simple peasant in the far reaches of Africa in the mid-19th century
02:19And one day you, your wife, and the children went out, like every day, for the reason
02:22I went to the field next to the Orange River in Kimberley, South Africa
02:25The sun is rising, the birds are chirping, and the weather is beautiful.
02:28And you'll get your usual show on Happy Farm.
02:30I asked your older son to go and fix the water pipe so you could work.
02:33My condolences, unfortunately you are not a hero, priest.
02:35Your eldest son is the hero
02:37A 15-year-old boy named Erasmus Chikoms
02:39The one who got carried away trying to find something to get the photographer to agree with
02:43After he crossed it, he sat down to rest a bit on the riverbank.
02:45He then relaxes amidst the beautiful natural scenery.
02:47But then he suddenly noticed something more beautiful
02:50It will change not just your love life
02:52But all of history
02:53What he meant was that this glimpse is something that will stimulate the economies of countries.
02:56Companies, simple two-footed people, and civil wars
02:58Of course, my dear, we know that whoever is worthy of it puts diamonds in it.
03:00This is the episode, meaning it didn't get injured.
03:02But for him, there was still no diamond.
03:04It's really nice, but for him
03:06This is like laying a brick that turns blue and shines
03:09It looks nice, yes, but it's expensive.
03:11I don't know
03:12After that, the important thing is that the boy took the diamond and played with it for a while.
03:14Take it and then give it to his sister to play with too.
03:17And her mother saw her playing and asked, "What's that in your hand?"
03:19How long has she stood up and taken this stone, and stood up?
03:20His tool was a gift for his friend.
03:22Gathering precious stones, come on, take them
03:25This was almost the most expensive gift, my dear.
03:27In history, do you know how much this diamond was?
03:29An inheritance? Five inheritances? There were twenty-one.
03:31And a quarter of the inheritance of Di Azizi was her name
03:33Eureka Diamond and the one who found it
03:34Is this the child, Rasmus Jacobs?
03:36The word Eureka, of course, comes from the ancient Greek language.
03:39Archimedes's thing, Zibanio, like Newt, you're so funny.
03:41The important point, regardless of Archimedes' argument
03:43The diamonds that he was familiar with at the time
03:45It used to come from Brazil and India, but almost
03:47In small quantities compared to production
03:49Today, but this is the first time
03:51We find it in Africa, of course.
03:52The news spread among the farmers.
03:54Diamond, oh diamond
03:58Indeed
03:58The farmers began searching for diamonds in their lands.
04:01Approximately three years later, it was discovered
04:03The Star of South Africa
04:04Masa, my dear, 83 lands
04:07My dear, can you imagine what 83 lands means?
04:09Beckon
04:10This will sustain you and generations after you.
04:12Not a generation of generations
04:14Diamonds are one of the most beautiful things
04:16In the most expensive and rarest of places, there is a rare beauty.
04:18It forms slowly in the Earth over millions of years
04:21So we can see the diamonds
04:22Where does it begin? We'll go back about
04:243.3 billion years
04:26Before victory even passed, it walked on the ground.
04:28We will dig from 100 to 50 kilometers
04:31Under the ground
04:32And in that great depth
04:33A very strong compression occurs for the carbon particles.
04:36Because it has very high pressure
04:37More than 50 kilobars
04:39and very high temperature
04:401300 degrees Celsius
04:42Understand that you'll stay hot, that your temperature will remain at 40.
04:44This is 1300
04:45These are the conditions that surround carbon molecules.
04:48The first thing that happens is the temperature drops a little.
04:50Penalties are subject to some
04:52Diamond crystals
04:53When does this happen? When a volcanic eruption occurs.
04:56Crystals fly with you and flow with
04:57Volcanic pipes or Kimberline pipes
05:00Regarding the city of Kimberley, which I mentioned to you a little while ago
05:01And on the Earth's surface, there remained volcanic material.
05:03Then she goes down and takes her breath.
05:06It dries and cools, forming
05:08Hidden rocks inside
05:10Almas, look, she's gone now.
05:11From 150 km underground
05:14It emerges in a volcano
05:15He waits up there and then goes inside
05:18And the atmosphere remains rocky
05:19And more than billions and hundreds of millions of years
05:22The Greeks and Monans were fascinated by the shape of diamonds.
05:24Me too, Abu Hamid, me too
05:25To the point that they were convinced it must have come from the stars
05:28This time of year, the diamond is often a star
05:30From what we see, it lights up
05:31Some of them believed that this diamond was beautiful.
05:34It is the tears of the gods
05:35It is said, my dear, that the first to discover diamonds were the Indians.
05:38In the fourth section, Abu Milad and Almas
05:39I traveled between India and China via trade.
05:41It held legendary value among humans.
05:43Because it can refract light and engrave on metals
05:46A stone that doesn't look nice
05:47Beautiful, but also strong
05:49It reached the point where the word "Diamon"
05:51It comes from the Greek word "admas".
05:53Which means strength and solidity
05:55Avoiding its use in decoration was a practice common among believers at that time.
05:57He is able to protect them from the excesses of evil power.
05:59They were convinced that he was helping
06:01Medically, in healing from diseases and wounds
06:03Until the eighth century, there was no other source.
06:05But after what happened in India
06:07The encrypted version was used for recycling in other places.
06:09So that our business doesn't stop
06:11We want tears
06:11Until they found it in Brazil in 1725
06:13But my dear, what was in Brazil wasn't enough.
06:16We want to heal again, she wants to get married
06:18The global student body was large
06:19And in those circumstances, Rasmas Jacobs
06:21The South African boy
06:22Discover the diamond
06:24From that time on, diamond mining began in South Africa.
06:27Specifically in the city of Kimberley
06:281871
06:35Discoverers that the Earth contains halogens
06:38The news spread and the area became more popular.
06:40Ilha Hala fi Halmas fi al-ard
06:42Wajih, the prospectors from all over
06:44Come on, we want to see the land in Halmas, guys!
06:46Of course, the last ones left this talk, they were afraid.
06:48They understand what they're selling; they don't want it.
06:49At that time, the Kimberley mine was being excavated.
06:52Or what is called the Big Hall
06:54Over the course of 43 years
06:55From 1871 to 1914
06:5850,000 workers
06:59They dug in the mine with their hands
07:01Using the axe and the hoe, but
07:03And they extracted approximately during this period
07:043 tons of diamonds
07:0714.5 million lands
07:10Let's forget about Sirine, what are we talking about?
07:11We are talking about a national treasure
07:13A true treasure
07:14But this time it's not the treasure of metaphor
07:16The one who's on the trip
07:17No, we don't want him; he wasn't alive.
07:19A treasure on this journey
07:20We want the treasure that comes after the journey.
07:22This is the real treasure
07:23The most important thing is that he tells you it's a treasure, so top, I don't know what.
07:24And I will work on exposure
07:25No, I want the money.
07:27I want cash
07:28I want the qadsh and the bnti
07:29But I'm sorry, my friend.
07:40In 1888 they decided to unite conservation efforts
07:43It contains one mine owned by one company.
07:45It was founded by Cecil John Rhodes
07:46This, my dear, is the one for the famous Oxford scholarship.
07:48Bernie Brento
07:50And they named the De Beers company
07:53In reference to the latter, the Dutch were afraid and sold the land.
07:55Yalawi means this company, their business is important.
07:58It's a tough history, my dear. So now you're criticizing the companies that are supposed to be the workers' backs and burdened with whatnot?
08:04And then you find out that the company is called De Beers after the De Beers brothers, so you insult De Beers even though it's a marginalized company.
08:08He didn't sell the land.
08:09History is harsh, my friend. The Kimberley mine flooded the market, creating a boom in the diamond market to such an extent, my friend, that it was a disaster.
08:16The world of demand remained
08:17Yalawi
08:18no
08:18You know, my friend, what happens when supply outstrips demand.
08:21The value decreases
08:22To the point that the song doesn't even mention that diamonds are considered a rare stone, and they started replacing them with other valuable stones like rubies and sapphires.
08:29Blue and emerald are used as engagement rings.
08:32In 1919, the value of diamonds had dropped by 50%, so something had to happen to restore the balance; nothing else would do.
08:40In the year 1215, the Pope declared it the third year.
08:44The important thing is that this man decided that there would be a period between the engagement and the official marriage.
08:49What's this, Abu Hamid? Is this the one who invented the engagement period? Well, isn't this supposed to be a middle ground? This is supposed to be a long-term engagement!
08:54My dear, he's dreaming of engagement.
08:56Oh, engagement ring, we all worked
09:01And speaking of engagement rings, this guy is the one who invented engagement rings too.
09:05he
09:07Because in order to define this period and link it to when the bride and groom are together without sexual tension, it's not appropriate to put a ring on their finger.
09:13So it seems, my dear, that this man invented the internet.
09:15Of course, the network reflects social status.
09:19In passports, Bozt on a gram
09:20The effectiveness of the people and the song
09:21They continued to wear rings adorned with precious stones.
09:24You're telling me, Abu Hamid, what does this have to do with our story?
09:26The connection between this and our story is that the marketing campaign
09:29The one who tried to adjust the supply and demand balance of diamonds
09:32To submit the request again
09:33I based it on the idea of ​​an engagement ring.
09:35Year by year and two
09:36De Beers presented one of the
09:38The best marketing campaigns to look out for
09:41To the extent that his field is advertising
09:43She described it in the year 2000
09:44That it was the campaign with the best slogan
09:47In the twentieth century
09:48The slogan was
09:50People don't want diamonds
09:52We don't see it as something valuable.
09:53Not rare
09:54Its price dropped
09:54But through this campaign
09:56Everything has changed
09:57Because they worked on a strategy of the utmost cunning.
10:00So that they can convince the youth
10:01The newlyweds who missed the wedding
10:02Diamonds
10:03And diamonds only
10:04He is the only one who is ill
10:06For love and romance
10:07And its size and the purity of the diamond
10:10It's what proves your love
10:12Beko Sayes Baz Meter
10:13And my dear daughters were convinced of that.
10:15I claim that they were the first to be convinced.
10:18And then they convinced the whole world
10:19What is the subject of work?
10:21He was trying to establish a new concept in the culture.
10:23It's not just about product marketing
10:25Why not buy a diamond for it?
10:27On the land of this period
10:28And it will be very nice
10:29no
10:29They also started giving diamonds to Hollywood movie stars.
10:32What are these influencers now?
10:34The kings of romance and love
10:35In the Titanic movie
10:37They created a system called Hollywood Personalities
10:39They distributed photos of the celebrities and their stories.
10:41On 125 newspapers in America
10:43They described in detail the size of the diamond
10:45Its quality
10:46And its relationship to love
10:47fashion designers
10:48They seem to be discussing a topic on the radio.
10:50School hazards were dealt with across America
10:52Its goal is to educate girls about diamonds.
10:54As an engagement ring
10:55If I don't love you
10:55He won't bring you
10:56If he loves you, he'll get you
10:57Their goal
10:58Create a high-quality model
10:59I aspire
11:00Sons of the intermediate edition
11:01They see the artists and their wives
11:03and politicians
11:04They are wearing diamonds
11:05It remains every girl's dream
11:06Not just the rich
11:07The important thing, my dear, is that the campaign was an extraordinary success.
11:09From 1939 to 1979
11:11De Beers diamond sales in America
11:13It jumped from 23 million to over 2 billion
11:16Yalawi
11:16Can you imagine the jump?
11:18I saw Christian Donaldov's jump
11:19He's in Juventus and he's doing that
11:21That's a slightly longer jump
11:22And in chains
11:23Those 40 years
11:24De Beers' advertising budget jumped
11:26From $200,000 per year
11:2710 million
11:28excellent
11:28Congrats!
11:29Huge sales
11:30Woohoo
11:31That's it, Fino.
11:32The idea arose to market the new product
11:34The Second Diamond
11:35The second evening
11:36As a form of documenting love after marriage
11:39Maybe it's not Musk anymore
11:40I need another touch
11:42The first one you showed that you were in love
11:43Okay
11:43But will this love last?
11:45How do we measure this with the other method?
11:47My dear, I tell you
11:48Some of the pages didn't have an engagement seal.
11:50There's no room for romance before marriage.
11:52Whose outfit?
11:52Japanese costume
11:53They have a problem with this, Abu Hamad.
11:55De Beers Doscot
11:56Let people put up fabricated
11:57And Zilzton paints
11:58And it lands, flipping right and left.
12:00Then an individual intervened
12:01And people eat squalor?
12:03no
12:03We are testing the Japanese market
12:04But of course, my shaking was necessary.
12:06A magical marketing touch
12:08They made diamond rings
12:10As a symbol of modern Western values
12:12Year sixty-seven
12:13When my daughter started in Japan
12:15My family is five percent Japanese
12:17They had German rings
12:18One year of completion
12:19How much did it reach?
12:20Sixty percent
12:20Oh my God
12:21From five percent to sixty percent, Buhamad
12:23My dear, let me tell you
12:24Japan remains the second largest market for diamonds.
12:27After America
12:28Because of the campaign's shaking
12:29They didn't have an engagement.
12:30No shaking
12:31No Innocence
12:31De Beers
12:32Not only was she able to market to her family
12:34He didn't see the demand, where?
12:35And you went to the blood-stained place
12:37No, dear
12:38This created the blood
12:39One of them tells me, "You usurer, I am Muhammad"
12:40It means behind all these love and romance stories
12:42In this capitalist face
12:44ugly
12:45my dear
12:45You will not see an ugly face
12:47Still
12:48What's coming is uglier
12:50The ugly face, Azzo
12:51New pampering
12:52He might see it in a movie
12:53Diamond Country
12:54My young artist colleague Leonardo Di Cap
12:56I love that I'm excited about his new movie.
12:58Don't look up
12:59The situation, dear
13:00After South Africa
13:01Al-Almaz tapping hit the village house
13:03Country of Ivory Coast
13:04Democratic Republic of Congo
13:05Angola and Sierra Leone
13:07Diamonds appeared in abundance in them
13:09And the regret in the last days of training and the nineties
13:10Civil wars were devastating for the country.
13:12Armed militias were appearing
13:14She is trying to seize control of the government.
13:15Horrific massacres
13:16This was happening because of these militias.
13:17They needed funding to increase their weapons.
13:20They were exploiting people
13:30Diamond control
13:31It is control of the country
13:32Because it's a business involving enormous sums of money.
13:34The United Nations took action and renewed the 2003 agreement.
13:37With diamond exporting countries
13:38She called it The Kimberly Process Scheme
13:41Under the agreement
13:42A ban was imposed on diamond trading with countries that still have militias.
13:45Stop trading with these militias
13:47Any rough diamond that is exported or imported must
13:49It must be accompanied by a notarized certificate.
13:51She's not coming from the direction of these militias.
13:53And the countries outside this agreement
13:54It's not worth doing business with them in the first place.
13:56You don't want them to keep exploiting people with forced labor.
13:58They will be forced to bring the money.
14:00They sell them and use the proceeds to buy weapons.
14:01It occupies people more
14:02More violence is occurring in the country.
14:03The agreement limited this issue
14:05But they still exist
14:06One of them says to me, "Oh Abu Hamid"
14:07Thank God
14:08If I plan after the agreement
14:10This means that my ring
14:12It's not always a country
14:13Praise be to God, Yas
14:14I'm so sorry for you, my dear.
14:15Oh, that's what I'm used to.
14:16Something beautiful, of course, you
14:18Even this is taken into consideration
14:19And so on, our youth
14:20And our brothers in Sri Lanka
14:21And our brothers in Code Ivory Coast
14:23Replay in the Nations Cup
14:24So let me tell you, and surprise you
14:25Your ring might not even be the diamond one.
14:28What is this, my dear?
14:30No, don't talk to me, don't talk to me
14:31Don't worry
14:33Don't wait, my dear.
14:35Ya Jaya Muhammad
14:36Your fiancé is gone, my daughter
14:37Don't worry
14:38I mean
14:39This diamond could be artificial.
14:41O Hamad
14:43Wait
14:43This is a diamond thing
14:45But it's a real diamond.
14:46But it might not be normal.
14:47Yes, God is as I say
14:48What's this? Only in Syria, Ahmed?
14:49You are dear
14:50How are you? Are you pregnant?
14:51What did you do to my dear?
14:52Ha
14:53My intention, my dear, is to say
14:54Diamonds are useful when they are artificial.
14:56He pretends
14:57God
14:57Well, that's how we should all follow suit: manufacture, sell, and make money like everyone else.
15:00My dear, you are making the same mistake as Germany.
15:02Remember when they kept following money, money, money, money, lots of money?
15:05Where did the value go?
15:06Behind the chair factory
15:08What a diamond you're working on, my dear
15:09It has the same specifications as mined diamonds.
15:11This means it possesses the same chemical and physical properties.
15:14Diamond mines
15:16Okay, let's do the swimming with praise.
15:17Do you remember, my dear, the circumstances I told you about?
15:19The one in which diamonds are formed
15:21High temperature
15:22high pressure
15:24Hugo, what is this about the job you need to do?
15:25Now
15:26Very high pressure
15:26The temperature is terrible
15:28That's all, Hamad
15:29Not only that
15:29There are two ways to enlarge a diamond.
15:31Either Najib Sayed or Bazra
15:33Mr. or the seed
15:35She takes it out of another large diamond.
15:36It remains a small piece
15:37We then place it in a material called graphite carbon.
15:41In a locked room
15:42Keep it at a temperature of 1500 degrees Celsius
15:45Of course, a little bit of pressure, I mean
15:46You need to do one and a half pounds per square inch
15:49But this method will get you a diamond.
15:50Someone please tell me if there's anything missing from this recipe.
15:53Is there another recipe?
15:54There is another recipe
15:55Its name is Chemical Fiber De Position
15:58You put the seed in a tightly sealed room.
16:01It contains carbon-rich gas
16:08It sticks around the seed
16:09Its atoms are made up of carbon molecules.
16:11And the diamond grows
16:13Which of the two methods I told you about is suitable for today?
16:15They can make us diamonds
16:16The truth in January 2019
16:18Princess Megham, wife of Princess Harry, grandson of Elizabeth
16:20I walked the streets of London
16:22People noticed the diamond ring he was wearing.
16:25Because it was a lab-made diamond
16:26Not natural diamonds
16:27I'm surprised, my dear, that the prince's wife is wearing artificial diamonds.
16:31Although, God willing, the need is his grandmother
16:33Queen Elizabeth with Stania
16:35A diamond more than
16:37500 carats is its price
16:39Approximately $400 million
16:41Her name is Kalnan
16:42You're not going to find it in my stick.
16:43Or you might find it in the queen's crown.
16:46Fset Tdeleh Hete
16:47God, why does she make the house produce artificial offspring?
16:49The important thing, my dear, is that family problems are irrelevant.
16:52In the British Royal Family
16:54And the situation is often like this, how lucky he is
16:55Never mind, we don't want to talk about personal matters in Britain.
16:58And Bo, who was always married to the princess, actually, but we still don't want him, please, my dear.
17:03Don't run to the Numiba, I love it.
17:05Is this program based on numbness?
17:07Regardless of all that, I mean
17:08What I want to say is that diamond manufacturing technology has made competition very high among diamond companies.
17:13Companies that manufacture diamonds in laboratories
17:15And companies that mine natural diamonds
17:17Because producing diamonds in laboratories is much cheaper
17:19However, some reports indicate that lab-grown diamonds use an enormous amount of energy.
17:23And it causes gas emissions from the Greenhouse Gas
17:26Which means the gases that cause global warming
17:28More than three times the number of diamond mining operations
17:30But despite that, you'll still find reports saying the exact opposite.
17:33She says that the environmental damage resulting from mining is greater than that from industrial mining.
17:37This is a fight between diamond companies, we have nothing to do with it.
17:39What I want to tell you is that we can manufacture diamonds.
17:42It's not something that just comes out naturally; we can make something like it.
17:46But like money, too much of it has no value, so you need to control the supply.
17:50Aref Azizi, in his opinion, what makes the story of natural diamonds better than the story of synthetic diamonds?
17:54It's more romantic
17:55The story is about a beautiful, sparkling stone that forms slowly beneath layers of earth over millions of years.
18:07It announces a romantic story that can be sold
18:09As we saw, how did De Beers sell it?
18:11But my dear, it feels like someone edited something and removed it.
18:15The tragic part of the story
18:17The African tragedy part is to make the story marketable.
18:20This is where the role of the Dahya comes in, to show you the contradictions.
18:23And the ideas we thought were snakes turned out not to be snakes
18:25My advice is that we need to change this network system. I think we
18:29I present to my beloved, my dear Petco, and he asks her, "What is this?"
18:31It won't open? Sorry, I forgot my private key.
18:33This is a hacker
18:35My dear Hani, I'm thinking of Prince Felix
18:38Which is understood to be the husband of Queen Elizabeth
18:40She has the largest diamond in the world.
18:43Its price is $400 million.
18:44This is a network of cats
18:46My dear friend, I haven't seen the series "Zakouroun"
18:48And I mean the English Royal Dog
19:17Translated by Nancy Qanqar

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