الدحيح - طريقك لافضل جنسية

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00:00GEDDO GEDDO GEDDO
00:02What does it mean?
00:04Come on Billy
00:06Even though you're still young
00:08I'll explain
00:10When a man and a woman love each other
00:12They...
00:14GEDDO I MEAN SEXUALITY
00:16I don't understand what you're talking about
00:18I'll explain something else
00:20Look Billy
00:22There's something you need to know about humans
00:24That they're stupid?
00:26That's right
00:28But humans are also...
00:30SELFISH?
00:32What now?
00:34Are we going to let Geddo continue his pride?
00:36Or are we going to look for another source?
00:38Like me?
00:40No Geddo, we'll find another source just like you
00:42Go ahead and continue
00:44Humans are racist
00:46What do you mean racist?
00:48I mean they don't listen to Geddo
00:50God damn you
00:52Racist
00:54I mean they look at racism
00:56But Geddo doesn't look at the essence
00:58And that's his relationship with sexuality
01:00That's something
01:02Humans did it so that they'd be able to exploit their human brother
01:04To prevent him from entering his land
01:06With the excuse that he's an uncivilized immigrant
01:08Just like what Europe does
01:10And why would I want to go to Europe
01:12When they don't have morals or principles
01:14Like they claim?
01:16God damn you
01:18What kind of awareness is this?
01:20That's the curse that the new generation of children have been cursed with
01:22They built it in a hurry
01:24What's going on inside you?
01:26No Geddo, we're just kids
01:28What were you saying?
01:30Look Billy
01:32I want to tell you
01:34Always
01:36Always
01:42I feel like this is supposed to be the first lesson
01:44I feel the same
01:46I don't know
01:48Take your time Geddo
01:50Don't you have a lesson you need to learn?
01:52I don't know
01:54I'm still new to this Geddo thing
01:58I don't have experience
02:00Same
02:04Do you know that mom and dad will get divorced
02:06Because they don't love you?
02:08Mom!
02:10This will help you develop your character in the future
02:12You'll sit with someone
02:14And you'll draw her attention
02:16Because she'll want to fix you
02:18So you'll bond with her
02:22Welcome to a new episode of The Guest Show
02:24This is a sexual episode
02:26What?
02:28What are you saying Abu Ahmed?
02:30I mean I'm talking about sex
02:32Oh!
02:34You mean the passport and all
02:36In 1977, the Iranian
02:38Nehram Kareem Nasiri
02:40Was expelled from his country, Iran
02:42And he was reprimanded for his sex
02:44He went to many countries
02:46Until the year 1981
02:48After 4 years
02:50After 4 years
02:52He took the refugee papers
02:54Oh Abu Ahmed!
02:56What a happy ending
02:58You'll find happy endings only in cinemas
03:00And in Real Madrid matches
03:02Because Nehram gave his papers during his travels
03:04And he was detained as a legal prisoner
03:06In Charles de Gaulle airport in France
03:08So this man can stay in France
03:10Without any passport
03:12There's nothing that can prove
03:14Who he is, where he's from and his mother
03:16He doesn't have a passport
03:18So he can't touch this story
03:20Which is his source
03:22And he'll keep repeating it
03:24Whenever the authorities ask him about it
03:26I feel like you're trying to make me feel bad
03:28This man was detained for a week
03:30A week, a month
03:32Don't exaggerate
03:34And then he stayed in Charles de Gaulle airport in France
03:36He didn't even have a passport
03:38I don't think he'll stay in the airport
03:40For a day or two or even a month
03:42But if you watch The Guest Show
03:44You'll know that he'll stay there for 18 years
03:46And he'll have to say goodbye to his relatives
03:48This man spent his 80s and 90s in the airport
03:50This man doesn't know anything about Hamid Al Shaari
03:5218 years in the airport
03:54Sleeping on a bench
03:56And collecting vouchers to be able to eat
03:58In the airport restaurants
04:00Until his presence in the airport became very normal
04:02You'll find a place to check in
04:04Uncle Mehran
04:06He became a part of the airport
04:08The airport's pilots and employees
04:10Know him as one of the best
04:12And even in 1999 when the French will give him papers
04:14Suddenly Mehran will refuse to take the papers
04:16No, he'll refuse to take the papers
04:18He'll leave the airport where he's locked up
04:20He's been there for 18 years
04:22Mehran Azizi saw that the papers didn't express his identity
04:24As a citizen from Iran
04:26And he'll hold on to his presence in the airport
04:28Which became his new homeland
04:30Mehran's story will be documented in the famous movie The Terminal
04:32By Spielberg
04:34And when Tom Hanks manages to get out of the airport
04:36And take Catherine Zeta-Jones
04:38Actually Azizi, the story could be better
04:40Because the real Mehran will die in the airport
04:42Where he spent most of his life
04:44Do you know how old Azizi died?
04:46He died in November 2022
04:48He was born in Iran and died in Charles de Gaulle airport
04:50He spent most of his life in an airport
04:52He died in the airport without an ID and without a nationality
04:54Maybe Azizi wakes up every morning
04:56As an Egyptian
04:58Or a Lebanese or a Kuwaiti
05:00As if it's something very normal
05:02But let me tell you that nationality
05:04Didn't start as a right acquired by people
05:06But as a privilege
05:08You need to work hard to get it
05:10Azizi spent most of his life like Mehran
05:12He didn't have an ID
05:14Nationality started as a privilege
05:16In his book
05:18Citizenship, a very short introduction
05:20Richard Bellamy says
05:22If we look at the concept of nationality in ancient Greece
05:24Who do we find?
05:26The owners of the property
05:28So if you don't have anything and you're a woman
05:30Or you have something but you're a woman
05:32Thank you, you're not with us
05:34Not only that, but you need to belong to an Assyrian family
05:36I mean, a father from Assyria and a grandfather from Metroba
05:38Do you know who Azizi calls from outside?
05:40The answer is easy, the poor, the slaves, the women
05:42The immigrants, and anyone from Metroba
05:44That way Azizi calls at least two people
05:46Those who are called citizens
05:48I want to tell you that Rome also uses the same concept
05:50In the same way, to separate their line
05:52From the population of the areas that Rome invited
05:54And left under the wing of the empire
05:56We're all under the Roman empire
05:58But not everyone who looks at the prophet
06:00Will be able to call himself a citizen
06:02Don't worry Abu Ahmed, don't get mad
06:04I mean, the world was once without slavery
06:06You're talking about things in the old days
06:08We're now in a new world, a world of people
06:10Who are all citizens and happy
06:12Maybe I'm not happy, but I'm a citizen
06:14It's a shame, Abu Ahmed, that we're in a developed world
06:16We all have nationalities, we all have the internet
06:18We don't have slaves and slaves and all that
06:20The idea of nationality, Azizi, we can say
06:22The idea of speaking on the idea of nationality and citizenship
06:24Which is distributed to the majority of the population
06:26This is a relatively new concept in human history
06:28It will begin to appear in the 18th century
06:30After the French and American revolutions
06:32The prophet calls for every citizen to take the citizenship of his country
06:34Until the global dream of human rights appears
06:36Which is, ironically enough, in 1948
06:38Which is half of the 15th article
06:40It is the right of every person
06:42To enjoy their nationality
06:44And not be deprived of their nationality
06:46In a negative way
06:48Sorry, Abu Ahmed, that was in the old days
06:50Now we're in a developed era
06:52In the old days there was no crepe roll with cheese on strips
06:54Now there is crepe roll with cheese on strips
06:56It can be normal or spicy
06:58In the old days we didn't have nationalities
07:00Now we all have nationalities
07:02According to the UN, in 2022
07:04The world has 4.4 million people
07:06Who didn't have a nationality
07:08And they lost it
07:10Those who don't have a nationality
07:12Are called stateless persons
07:14Believe me, Azizi, this number is much bigger than that
07:16Because these are the documented cases
07:18Of people who don't have a nationality
07:20So those who don't have a nationality
07:22Are those who don't have a nationality
07:24No, how is that, Abu Ahmed?
07:26Someone is born in the country and doesn't have a nationality
07:28You don't go to the hospital to get a birth certificate
07:30And this nationality is not supposed to be a nationality
07:32How is that, Azizi? There are many reasons for that
07:34Some countries, like Barbados, for example
07:36If the father is unknown, the mother can't pass to the son
07:38And there are countries like Yugoslavia
07:40When it was divided into smaller countries
07:42Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina
07:44There were minorities like the Roma people
07:46Those people suffered for a long time
07:48So that any new country would include them
07:50So they became, over time, stateless
07:52When you don't have a nationality
07:54You don't have the right to education
07:56Or to care for anyone
07:58You don't have the right to exist like everyone else
08:00You might think that nationality is a system
08:02That guarantees equality for everyone
08:04So that we all are the children of our country
08:06And this was the view of many scholars
08:08Like H. Marshall, the sociologist
08:10Who saw that we finally got it
08:12As soon as we have a nationality
08:14We were able to cancel the differences between the classes
08:16From the minister to the minister
08:18We all have a nationality
08:20And we all have bad images of it
08:22Marshall saw that nationality guarantees everyone
08:24The basic rights under one country
08:26So that everyone is equal
08:28And doesn't discriminate
08:30I'm sorry, I don't know how to read
08:32This is a great example
08:34So that we know, dear
08:36What is nationality
08:38Let's start with a simple question
08:40In her book, Golden Passport
08:42Global Mobility for Millionaires
08:44Ms. Christine Sourat
08:46Says that nationality is a contract
08:48Between you and the state
08:50It gives you a set of rights
08:52And asks for a set of obligations
08:54Like paying taxes, or serving in the military
08:56Or participating in elections
08:58But these obligations are not always the most important
09:00For example, sometimes taxes are taken from anyone
09:02Who lives in the state
09:04Even if he doesn't have a nationality
09:06And something like compulsory immigration
09:08Doesn't apply to all states
09:10And for elections, if you don't want to participate
09:12No one will withdraw from the nationality
09:14That's why Christine says that in many cases
09:16The rights you take are more important than the obligations
09:18Education, health, social care
09:20For those who are residing or unemployed
09:22The right to vote, to run for office
09:24And to get protection inside and outside the country
09:26And outside the country, dear, is very important
09:28Because you, for the people
09:30You know your nationality, your passport
09:32Your nationality, which will give you the right
09:34To travel to certain countries or not
09:36To travel by VIAS or without VIAS
09:38In short, your nationality will determine
09:40What your state will give you
09:42And what you will take
09:44And how the rest of the states will treat you
09:46Depending on many changes, the characteristics of your nationality
09:48Determine and affect a lot
09:50Christine tells us, for example
09:52That the average income of a citizen in Tajikistan
09:54Is around 5000$
09:56He lives in a closed and strict system
09:58No good government education
10:00And no respectable wages
10:02For example, you have the brown citizen
10:04His average annual income
10:06Is 300$
10:08And his average age is 57 years
10:10While a citizen like him in Finland
10:12Lives an average of 80 years
10:14And his annual income is 42,000$
10:16Can you imagine, dear? Your state can affect your age
10:18Scientifically, dear, and statistically
10:20Your nationality affects your age
10:22And this is what the world of economics, Branko Milanovic
10:24Calls citizenship penalties
10:26Your nationality can give you opportunities and privileges
10:28Like Finland, for example, or be a violator
10:30In other countries, to the extent of its expression
10:32Some nationalities can be
10:34Liability more than an asset
10:36That is, it can be a burden
10:38More than a source of income
10:40To help you and get you out
10:42It means that instead of being something that pushes you up
10:44It can be something that brings you back
10:46For example, a lot of nationalities affect your nationality
10:48The second element, one of the elements that affects
10:50Your rights and duties is
10:52Political circumstances
10:54And this, for example, appears to us in unstable countries
10:56There, no one knows what to hide tomorrow
10:58And this makes many citizens want a plan
11:00To secure their lives
11:02In China, for example, you notice that the three areas
11:04Where citizens are ready to buy another nationality
11:06Are China, the countries that separated
11:08From the Soviet Union, and some countries in the Middle East
11:10And this is simple, because some of these countries
11:12With their passports can be
11:14In some powerful countries
11:16For example, if you have a Russian passport, it is very difficult
11:18For you to go and live and work
11:20And your life will be perfect in America or Europe
11:22There will be at least challenges
11:24If you have an Afghan passport, for example, no country will allow you to enter easily
11:26And of course, my dear, we all know
11:28The passport of the strongest popular
11:30The American passport, of course
11:32Bravo, Abu Ahmed, nice information
11:34What's new in this? Strangely, my dear, it's not
11:36Russian citizens or Chinese citizens
11:38Or citizens in some areas in the Middle East
11:40They are the ones who want to change their nationalities
11:42And this is a passport in the world, which is the American passport
11:44They also want to change their nationalities
11:46Let me tell you that the number of citizens
11:48In the United States who want another nationality
11:50Doubled since the beginning of 2015
11:52Abu Ahmed told these people to stop
11:54Give her an American passport and leave her
11:56Come on, my dear, you have become an agent
11:58An agent like Boutrek, who is the founder
12:00Of the story on Afshar and wrote the Prince of Hearts
12:02And the Prince of Hearts has inside
12:04Asking Americans for another nationality happens for many reasons
12:06For example, the American nationality
12:08Can expose its owner to danger in certain places
12:10He will tell you that he has an American passport
12:12So we kidnap him and ask for a ransom
12:14Or we want to take revenge on the Americans in a military operation
12:16So we kidnap Americans and
12:18Punish them, this is different
12:20The political situation in the United States itself
12:22For example, President Trump, many Americans
12:24Do not agree with his ideas or policies
12:26They consider that life in the shadow of his head will be a nightmare
12:28And also, my dear, there is a very important economic reason
12:30Like the many taxes that citizens pay
12:32Even if they are outside the United States
12:34I mean, my dear, you work in Egypt
12:36You pay your taxes to the United States
12:38What kind of world is this?
12:40According to the CNBC report
12:42All these reasons made Americans
12:44Who want another nationality
12:46Increased from just a few to more than 5,000 citizens
12:48Annually looking for another nationality
12:50And since almost all of us did not choose
12:52The place where we live or the nationality
12:54That we will necessarily get, you were changing your nationality
12:56As if you were changing the contract between you and the state
12:58You say, no, I did not choose anything
13:00I am not a player, I want a new nationality
13:02But unfortunately, the subject is not that simple
13:04The subject is more complicated than that
13:06What do you have?
13:08Nationality is more than that
13:10Nationality is memories, identity, culture, language
13:12My dear, listen to me
13:14What you are saying is the country, not the state
13:16The country and the state do not always have the same thing
13:18The country is the society that you feel you belong to
13:20And similar to its members
13:22And this has to do with your feeling of identity
13:24State and nationality
13:26These are legal terms
13:28They are supposed to be from any social or emotional
13:30Legal status
13:32I choose to be in conflict with someone who gives me rights
13:34And gives me rights and responsibilities
13:36And this proves that there are more than 2 million immigrants
13:38Who went to America with their families
13:40And they lived there for years and did not have a nationality
13:42These, my dear, are legally not American citizens
13:44Although they grew up aware
13:46And the country they were aware of
13:48America
13:50Although it is their only country that they know
13:52America
13:54On the contrary, there are people with a specific nationality
13:56For example, when we see artists
13:58They take passports from other countries
14:00Has anyone ever been to the Dominican Republic?
14:02No one has ever seen it
14:04Not even on the map
14:06It is normal to have a nationality
14:08Or a state passport
14:10But you do not feel the least interest
14:12Or the least belonging to it
14:14By the way, my dear
14:16As I told you, there are nationalities that have more advantages than other nationalities
14:18And the elimination of inequality between these nationalities
14:20Will produce in the language of football
14:22A movement of discrimination between its nationalities
14:24Everyone who lives with a limited number of nationalities
14:26They will go in a group
14:28They ask for stronger nationalities
14:30They ask for better rights and duties
14:32Mr. Mohamed Al-Birondi, the citizen of Al-Birondi
14:34What are you waiting for? Go to Finland
14:36My dear, this is a great idea
14:38Because if you try
14:40You will not find it easily
14:42Or you will wake up tomorrow and find a mass migration from country to country
14:44Our world is divided by borders
14:46And the password or the secret word
14:48That will give you from borders to borders
14:50Is your nationality
14:52So your nationality that you were born with is difficult to leave easily
14:54And it determines for you whether you will be able to travel or not
14:56And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
14:58And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:00And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:02And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:04And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:06And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:08And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:10And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:12And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:14And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:16And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:18And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:20And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:22And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:24And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:26And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:28And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:30And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:32And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:34And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:36And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:38And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:40And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:42And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:44And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:46And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:48And if you travel, where and how will you be able to travel
15:50I didn't find a reason to, God forbid, but because
15:52I'm my grandfather is from Uruguay
15:54So I like the origins and the passport that can
15:56Let me in Uruguay without a visa
15:58Actually, getting another nationality is something that happens
16:00And depending on your nationality, the world will determine
16:02Which doors will open for you, so the world also
16:04Puts conditions for you to open doors
16:06Let's see how to get a nationality
16:08Are you ready? I'm ready
16:10I'm with the papers and the pen and I'm recording
16:12The first way, my dear, is the right of the land
16:14That is, those who are born in a country take their nationality
16:16Considering the nationality of their family
16:18For example, you were born in a country like the United States, Britain
16:20And many European countries
16:22So you find a smart girl in a game of Newton
16:2430 episodes, she wants to be born in the United States
16:26She got a divorce in New York
16:28The second way is the right of blood, you inherit your family's nationality
16:30Considering where you were born
16:32Most people take their nationality through these two ways
16:34If you focus on them, my dear, you will find that a person has no interest in them
16:36For example, Abu Hamid, a person does not like the place where he was born
16:38And he wants to get another nationality
16:40Depending on, for example, a country like Algeria
16:42In which you can give your nationality
16:44If it proves that your ancestors are from this country
16:46In the case of China, for example, it almost does not give its nationality to anyone
16:48Even if you live in it for years
16:50There are countries that give you nationality when you apply for it
16:52According to the conditions
16:54You can work on it, it's not something you were born with
16:56Conditions, for example, like you live in this country
16:58For a certain number of years
17:00And you have a real intention to stay there forever
17:02Conditions, for example, like your age
17:04At your age, you become in a certain level, you master the language
17:06You have a job in the country
17:08And you work hard
17:10And some countries ask you to give up your original nationality
17:12Of course, these conditions are not fixed
17:14Each country has its conditions and its conditions
17:16And these differences produce
17:18That someone may have several nationalities
17:20And another one, as we have seen, has no nationality
17:22Of course, Abu Ahmed, as long as this is what you have in your heart
17:24Let's see how many conditions there are in some countries
17:26And let's get them right and take their nationality
17:28Life is not easy
17:30We said that this difference creates a demand for the strongest nationality
17:32And this makes, according to Dr. Christine
17:34Nationality is a commodity that has a price
17:36In the market, there is also a demand to determine the value of this commodity
17:38The country that produces the product will give you its nationality
17:40Why do you care?
17:42Each country will give what it wants
17:44According to what it needs
17:46There are countries, for example, that want to have education and skills
17:48They use specialized programs
17:50They look for the best
17:52And make it easier for them to get nationality
17:54These countries compete to reach the best minds
17:56The professor of law at the University of Toronto
17:58Islet Tucker calls this
18:00The exchange of talent for citizenship
18:02That is, nationality as a gift in exchange for talent
18:04Did you hear about the gift?
18:06Take the example of the United States
18:08America was the first magnetist to try to attract the best minds
18:10If you look at the Nobel Prize winners
18:12From 1901 to 1990
18:14We will find that almost 100 of the Nobel Prize winners
18:16Are Americans
18:18Half of them were either born abroad
18:20Like Einstein or Zewail
18:22Or the first generation of immigrants
18:24The United States relies on its employees
18:26To attract the knowledge migrants
18:28Someone like Einstein
18:30Expelled from Germany
18:32But a genius scientist
18:34Gave him a seat at Princeton
18:36Let him work on a nuclear bomb
18:38And he got a big research bag
18:40Like Einstein's Princeton
18:42And Zewail's Caltech
18:44And Stanford's Harim Hatem
18:46And Fiddle
18:48Until other countries entered the race
18:50Like Canada, Australia, France, Sweden
18:52And others
18:54This is where I realized that the real world competition
18:56Is not about goods, services and natural resources
18:58But about humans and minds
19:00Today, my dear
19:02The richest area in the world
19:04Is the PR area in California
19:06Like Apple, Google, Facebook
19:08Tesla and Nvidia
19:10These are areas where there are no malls
19:12You won't find petrol or something to take it
19:14No, there are malls
19:16These malls make a market value
19:18More than other countries
19:20If you divide the market value
19:22Of Nvidia's company
19:24Which is about 3 trillion dollars
19:26By Nvidia's 30,000 employees
19:28It makes about 100 million dollars
19:30Which means that an employee in Nvidia's company
19:32Is worth 100 million dollars
19:34So, what do these countries do
19:36To win these minds?
19:38They decided to give immigrants
19:40A bonus, which is citizenship
19:42The difference between citizenship and residency
19:44Is that citizenship is not easy to lose
19:46With a strong contract, you can pass it on to your children
19:48Germany, for example, after it was banned
19:50Suddenly said, come here, and not from Qatar
19:52No, we will give you citizenship
19:54And you can consider the country as your country
19:56Not only that, it also allows the number of citizenships
19:58And doesn't consider it a treason
20:00A country like Australia reduced the years of residency
20:02As a part of attracting foreigners
20:04This distinguishes it from other countries
20:06Take the rights and privileges we have
20:08And give us your right and experience
20:10Oh, Abu Ahmed, so the countries are creating us
20:12And they want to attract us
20:14Dear, I'm talking about citizenship, passports
20:16Also, dear, there is a very important thing
20:18Which is the point system
20:20You need to collect enough points
20:22To travel from one country to another
20:24Some countries turn you, your circumstances, your life
20:26Your experience and your education
20:28Into a group of points
20:30Which are separate points for the type of immigration
20:32Which it requires, I swear, depending on your qualifications
20:34You get points, the more scientific qualifications you have
20:36A master's degree or a doctorate, for example
20:38You get more points, the more experience you have
20:40The more suitable your age is
20:42Meaning from 18 to 35, you get higher points
20:44Because you are still in the age of work and sweets
20:46And the older you get, your points decrease
20:48This system is not only done in countries like
20:50Australia and New Zealand
20:52The points required differ from year to year
20:54Depending on the offer and demand
20:56And since the number is always large
20:58You will always be in the best position
21:00The big powerful countries that people want to go to
21:02Are the ones that put their feet on the ground
21:04And choose the best of the best
21:06So you find these countries that tell you
21:08If you are a worker, you can come alone
21:10But don't bring your family
21:12But if you get a doctorate, come and bring your family
21:14Of course, Ahmad, these countries that these people travel from
21:16Keep their rights in these people
21:18However, these countries have special minds
21:20So many times, dear, the mother countries
21:22Benefit from their children who turn them into nationalities
21:24Because these people, when they travel
21:26They make money for the people in the country
21:28We see this, for example, in a country like Lebanon
21:30The money that comes to it from abroad
21:32May be more important than the money that comes to it from within
21:34There are other countries that consider these trips
21:36Long safety trips
21:38These people will travel abroad, work
21:40Get money, learn
21:42Spend money, sit down
21:44And teach our young people
21:46Sometimes, these professionals are considered heroes
21:48Contributing to the national project
21:50Because they become models
21:52Look at Mohamed Salah in England
21:54Look at all these nationalities, all these qualifications
21:56I'm not going to register, I don't want to take points
21:58And stay for a few years and pay taxes
22:00No, I don't want to talk about this
22:02For example, they say, either you go or you give yourself
22:04The nationality you are talking about, can you buy it?
22:06Dear, you are in the middle of the free market, everything can be bought
22:08Put your conscience, Abu Ahmed, in the right place
22:10Because we said that the countries also need
22:12Something from the person who offers it
22:14Sometimes, the countries are also limited in money
22:16So here, these countries are talking about programs
22:18To grant nationalities to investors
22:20In short, this time they contribute to the state's economy
22:22In a financial way
22:24And this is an official program for certain procedures
22:26You can find it on the government's website
22:28And this promotion takes place in conferences like
22:30The Global Citizens Forum
22:32Conferences where businessmen are gathered
22:34They are the target group of this topic
22:36And they take advantage of the fame of actors
22:38In the size of De Niro, for example, who attended the conference in 2017
22:40Some singers, political figures, public figures, and so on
22:42Dear, this is not a bribe, take money and give it to a nationality
22:44No, there is an application to fill it
22:46You need reports and certificates
22:48To talk about your financial situation and your health situation
22:50Your legal situation and your investment situation
22:52There are more than 20 countries that offer this service
22:54There are 50,000 people who take the passport annually
22:56In this way
22:58It is true that most of them are small countries
23:00Their economy depends on these investments
23:02But nationality is one of the most important services
23:04I mean, it will not provide you with a healthy insurance
23:06Christine says that most of these countries are small countries
23:08They rely on these investments in their economy
23:10And nationality is one of the most important services
23:12That these countries issue
23:14And let me tell you, it brings income to the government
23:16More than the taxes it collects
23:18Most of its money and economy is based on oil
23:20Can you have a country that is issued by nationalities?
23:22For example, a country like Sante Kitts
23:24This is a small country
23:26It has about 55,000 people
23:28I'm not talking about the embassy or the gathering
23:30This is the title of the program
23:32The country that takes national programs
23:34It constitutes about 40% of the local product
23:36This country tells you, you don't have to live here at all
23:38Because if each one of the national buildings
23:40Stay here for two days, the country will be crowded
23:42We will not be able to accommodate all our citizens
23:44You will lose your money
23:46If you don't want to see your other family members
23:48Of course, you can look at it at any time
23:50Leave your nationality and throw it away
23:52Abu Ahmad, is the size of these investments good?
23:54I mean, it's worth it, you enjoy your nationality
23:56By God, Azizi, what is the issue?
23:58According to the country, what will you give me?
24:00And if any deal succeeds, it is regrettable
24:02Because the difference between what you pay and what you take
24:04A country like Cyprus, if you take its nationality
24:06You will be able to enter the European Union
24:08Here, Azizi, you ask for investments to get nationality
24:102.5 million dollars
24:12While the small countries ask you from 100 to 200 thousand dollars
24:14Let them go and pay thousands of dollars
24:16To buy nationality for a small country
24:18Buy something nice, big
24:20Who will do this, Abu Ahmad, you will find him a criminal and a killer
24:22In fact, according to statistics
24:24Only 4% of those who apply
24:26For the passports of this small group
24:28They have doubts
24:30And I want to tell you that 50% of those who work in this program have doubts
24:32So this is a small percentage, no
24:34As for the majority, they may be doing it for other reasons
24:36You have, for example, a Syrian citizen
24:38His appearance is European and white
24:40As soon as he looks at his passport, he begins to deal with it
24:42Because he is here, if his passport changes
24:44His life will change
24:46This is Azizi who made a person like Buffalo Drove
24:48Founder of Vcontact
24:50This is Azizi, the Facebook of Russia
24:52After the Russian government pressured him to leak personal data
24:54Especially to the opponents who use the site
24:56He took the nationality of St. Kitts
24:58And then he lived in Dubai
25:00And you have, for example, Arkady Voloz
25:02Founder of Yandex, which is the Google of Russia
25:04Which is the application of Yango, which you see the ads
25:06He took the nationality of Malta in 2016
25:08There are also countries that treat foreigners in a more friendly way
25:10Sometimes you own a foreign nationality
25:12It helps you live in a certain country
25:14More than if you were an original resident
25:16And as you can see, every country has its price
25:18And there is a pyramid scheme, and every country has its blood
25:20Your group did not bring you a passport
25:22From a country in the European Union
25:24In a small country with lower numbers
25:26And you can enter the European Union
25:28And maybe your situation in it is better than your original country
25:30Christine Soral says, Azizi
25:32She says to us, Azizi, you will know who I am, Abu Hamed
25:34This lady, Azizi, says
25:36Citizenship is often more about keeping people out
25:38Rather than inviting them in
25:40Citizenship is often more about keeping people out
25:42Rather than inviting them in
25:44No, this is a filter system
25:46We basically don't want anyone to come in
25:48Unless, it will make us more
25:50Everyone gathers their citizens within their own borders
25:52And I hope no one will attack our citizens in other countries
25:54Pakistan, stay in Pakistan
25:56What are you doing in Britain?
25:58Keep in mind that all the immigrants we are talking about
26:00Do not make up more than 3% of the human population
26:02That is, most of the time
26:04People really stay where they should
26:06As a result, the countries you don't want to leave
26:08Give you the option to leave
26:10And this is what I mean
26:12The borders are put on the lucky ones
26:14To prevent the least fortunate person from coming
26:16According to the American economist, Lance Pritchett
26:18Immigration to large countries will increase 5 times
26:20If there is no visa
26:22While the countries that have between their citizens
26:24Equal living conditions, do not put borders
26:26Like the difference between the borders between America and Canada
26:28And the borders between America and Mexico
26:30Here we want to build a wall, and here, hello
26:32Look at the borders that have been built
26:34How do you build a wall on it?
26:36And this is not only visible in the borders, but also in the literature of the people
26:38Who are looking for immigration
26:40Or those who have closed borders
26:42For example, the novel of Iqzat West
26:44Written by Pakistani author Mohsen Hameed
26:46This man imagines the world still in the dark east
26:48But the borders disappear and magic doors appear
26:50And through these magic doors
26:52The heroes can move from one country to another
26:54It may seem like a novel idea
26:56Far from reality
26:58But of course, there are many real ideas
27:00Ideas that try to overcome the sexual prison
27:02In a revolutionary or ideal way
27:04For example, on June 25, 1948
27:06The American warplane, Gary Davis
27:08Will enter the American embassy in Paris
27:10And declares his abdication
27:12Gary will say that he did not do anything strange
27:14But he applied his advice to the United Nations
27:16Which says that he has the right to abdicate
27:18And choose a new nationality
27:20And look at Abu Ahmed's choice of nationality
27:22Gary Aziz will declare that he is
27:24The world's number one citizen
27:26The first citizen to have a nationality in the world
27:28He is the son of the earth
27:30In 1953, he will establish
27:32The World Government of World Citizens
27:34This is a world government that issues
27:36Passports and travel permits
27:38To any citizen of the world
27:40It may seem to you that this is a crazy man
27:42No, Abu Ahmed, because he is American and white
27:44So it's okay to do it and it will pass
27:46And the movement got a lot of support
27:48People like Einstein and Albert Camus supported it
27:50Gary wanted to let the world know
27:52That a person can have a country he loves
27:54This is not a condition to change
27:56But it's not just about nationality and passports and borders
27:58It's about the difference between nationality and citizenship
28:00I am not a man without a country
28:02I am merely a man without nationality
28:04I may be without citizenship, but I am not without a country
28:06And although he will be arrested 32 times
28:08In airports throughout his life
28:10Everyone who tells him they want a passport
28:12They will get it from him
28:14And he will be able to sail without borders
28:16But despite these difficulties
28:18Despite his death in 2013
28:20His imaginary government issued
28:222.5 million documents
28:24And included 950,000 registered world citizens
28:26By 2020
28:28The World Service Authority
28:30Issued 750,000 passports
28:32The passport says
28:34He is a citizen of the world
28:36And it is written in the most popular languages of the world
28:38These passports were issued by the refugees
28:40And the stateless people I told you about
28:42And although this passport is international
28:44But perhaps these individual passports
28:46Made the stateless people feel
28:48That it is the first time they take citizenship easily
28:50Let me tell you that there are countries that responded to Gary
28:52And recognized his passport as a state
28:54Such as Ecuador, Zambia, Mauritania
28:56And Burkina Faso
28:58Gary sent his passport and his government papers
29:00To every citizen of his country
29:02For example, Edward Snowden
29:04The person who leaked the secrets of the American intelligence
29:06And then continued to speak between the two countries
29:08Now, my dear, Gary and the whole world
29:10Know that this is a symbolic move
29:12Symbolic
29:14But despite its symbolism
29:16It showed the world
29:18That there are many people who have the same feelings
29:20Towards the idea of ​​citizenship
29:22And between a passport and another passport
29:24And it may seem imaginary
29:26But the idea of ​​the United Nations
29:28Or that these people are symbolically united in one entity
29:30Was also an imaginary idea
29:32An idea that started with Emmanuel Kahn
29:34Who lived as an isolated philosopher
29:36Who did not go out of his city, Konigsberg
29:38But in reality, he still applied a lot
29:40Who knows, my dear, maybe one day
29:42Gary's idea will come true
29:44And we will all become international citizens
29:46And at that time we will not need passports or visas
29:48And at that time anyone can go anywhere
29:50You want to travel, you go to Abu Dhabi
29:52And see how you get on
29:54In the end, my dear, because I know that people hear my words
29:56And apply them, the goal in this episode is not to remove the borders
29:58And to replace the countries
30:00But I dream, as many people dream
30:02That man will have the ability
30:04To enjoy the good of the earth
30:06To enjoy the cultures of the world
30:08To enjoy the peoples of the world
30:10To be able to travel and get opportunities
30:12As he wants
30:14To be with a passport
30:16And tell the people around him that he is like them
30:18And that he will divide people into layers
30:20And make differences
30:22And that you have a passport of this degree
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