How fungi can disrupt the meat industry | Paul Shapiro | TEDxBoston

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 130

  • @zoeweil5777
    @zoeweil5777 Год назад +5

    What a fantastic talk. We will indeed one day look back on the raising and slaughter of animals the way we look back on quill pens, and we can't speed the process fast enough. This talk does much to accelerate the shifts ahead, and the Better Meat Co is helping to pave the way. Thank you!

  • @MKassfum
    @MKassfum Год назад +3

    Fungi to the rescue - great talk! Very much looking forward to enjoying more fungi products - I'm already smacking my lips.

  • @mattball2700
    @mattball2700 Год назад +5

    What a fantastic, insightful, and important talk! All of us here are rooting for The Better Meat Co!

  • @joshbalk
    @joshbalk Год назад +8

    Better Meat Co brings a lot of hope to solving serious challenges. I’m excited to see all they’re going to accomplish in the months and years to come.

  • @lainwilson6563
    @lainwilson6563 Год назад +5

    So inspiring to learn about a future free from factory farming animals - where we can still enjoy meat and reduce our footprint! Paul is exactly the right person to share this vision, and my hopes are that Better Meat Co, and companies like them, are able to help us all realize this future!

  • @arielnessel
    @arielnessel Год назад +4

    🌟 Absolutely captivating TedX talk by Paul Shapiro! As the brilliant author of "Clean Meat," he has once again enlightened us with a groundbreaking perspective on the future of food. This time, by delving into the transformative potential of fungi in disrupting the meat industry. 🍄

  • @jamminjosieluvsdogs
    @jamminjosieluvsdogs Год назад +13

    Great talk! I love the quilt / pen comparison and attention to geese. I always enjoy hearing you speak. Thanks for brining attention to factory farming and the technologies we have available to create a more humane food system starting today.

  • @nickhancock252
    @nickhancock252 Год назад +1

    Knocked it out of the park again Paul.

  • @btlboston2611
    @btlboston2611 Год назад +2

    Excellent talk! Always appreciate your insights.

  • @stevangelical7052
    @stevangelical7052 Год назад +8

    Excellent presentation. Well received message.
    I hope livestock farmers are taking note and preparing and investing for their own sake.

  • @jaredgoldstein1082
    @jaredgoldstein1082 Год назад +5

    Great Ted Talk! The culinary application of fungi seems endless!

  • @joannabromley1982
    @joannabromley1982 Год назад +2

    Fungi are so fascinating - thank you for bringing attention to how they can help improve our food system!

  • @matthewball7956
    @matthewball7956 Год назад +3

    Wow - I had no idea about fungi! Thanks for so much info!

  • @MusicVacations
    @MusicVacations Год назад +3

    Wow loved this talk! Thank you for sharing!

  • @AnneEllenMatt
    @AnneEllenMatt Год назад +2

    Fantastic talk - everyone should watch!

  • @Angels-3xist
    @Angels-3xist Год назад +2

    I 100% agree and love his points. I believe it is very important to affirm that this is not just an ethical issue but a global sustainability issue. As much as we care about reducing plastics, employing less destructive transit, reducing greenhouse gasses or in any other way reducing carbon footprints to begin to make headway on global sustainability which we are already very behind on, we should care about this. Two things I always like to note is that most of the meat we eat is actually pretty flavorless and what we enjoy comes from oils and seasonings etc., even world famous chefs can agree that steak isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, but the second point which is far more important is that any industry we want to change has to have a leg up in being consistently cost effective. The biggest difficulty most change faces is money. In this case, consistent and affordable options with variety and ease of access are a necessary thing and we still don’t see that at all. My question about any push is by the time we make it, will it have been enough? In cases of sustainability none of us are doing enough and many have no way of doing better.

  • @AshleyLurvesYou
    @AshleyLurvesYou Год назад +2

    This is so neat! Thank you for the breakdown!

  • @topsi555
    @topsi555 Год назад

    🙌🙌🙌🙌 go fungi!!!! Mushrooms already make incredible yummy substitutions- I use oyster mushrooms to replace chicken and king trumpet to replace pork

  • @genebaur6860
    @genebaur6860 Год назад +4

    Great talk, and really important message. Love what you are doing with the Better Meat Company!

  • @TheAshfyr
    @TheAshfyr Год назад

    As someone who feels that we should go healthier and better for the planet, but can't get over how good meat tastes, this is an interesting path to take. I still want the cultivated meat though, ngl

  • @prachijha1997
    @prachijha1997 Год назад +3

    Thanks for bringing fantastic fungi to the forefront of building an awesome and resilient food system! Love the work The Better Meat Co is doing to make this vision a reality!

  • @stewartwdavid7281
    @stewartwdavid7281 Год назад +1

    President Hoover campaigned on the slogan that his presidency would bring prosperity in the form of "a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage." Be careful what you wish for, internal combustion engines and factory farming have played an enormous role in ecosystem destruction. Society has recognized that if we are to reverse climate change, cars need to be retooled ASAP. Tragically, little attention has been paid to the need to replace the chickens and other animals raised for food. Mr. Shapiro's insightful talk gives me hope that we can do just that. Let's hope this happens sooner than later, as there isn't a minute to spare.

  • @paulschwartz4799
    @paulschwartz4799 Год назад +3

    Awesome talk. I’m a fan of the Quorn Mycoprotein products and look forward to seeing more mycelium products on store shelves.

  • @MrMeatTooth
    @MrMeatTooth Год назад +3

    I think this is a promising technology that has the potential to make a real difference in the fight against climate change. I'm excited to see how it develops in the years to come.

  • @abhimani00
    @abhimani00 Год назад +2

    Great and very informative talk! I learned so much how we can help the environment and the animals with this new food making technique!

  • @MariaRymarrr
    @MariaRymarrr Год назад +13

    Super idea! I hope it becomes a reality soon. And I will try this "new food, new meat" while remaining vegan.

    • @cartergomez5390
      @cartergomez5390 Год назад +1

      I'm a pescetarian!

    • @JohnnyWalkerBlack142
      @JohnnyWalkerBlack142 Год назад +1

      @@hannesRSA I'm sure many vegans enjoy the taste of meat

    • @dree8300
      @dree8300 Год назад +1

      @@hannesRSA I think vegans are vegans by choice, not because it's superior in nutrition, cause it's really not. I ate meat cause my parents made me and I didn't know anything about the meat industry. Now that I know about it, I chose not to eat meat, not because I don't like it, but because of the suffering of animals and the impact on the environment.

    • @dree8300
      @dree8300 Год назад

      @@hannesRSA No problem. I just can't bring myself to eat an animal that has been put on this Earth only to be eaten. I've always been very empathetic (some might say too much at times) and I understand that it's not everyone's cup of tea. I think change comes from within and any arguments you could have or I could have wouldn't really change our minds on this subject. I do appreciate to learn about a different perspective tho and I think people can agree to disagree respectfully. I also agree that some people are very passionate on both sides of this subject and resort to false dramatic claims too often.

    • @DeezNuggz
      @DeezNuggz Год назад

      moron

  • @HanshuDing
    @HanshuDing Год назад +3

    Great talk! You explained the alternative protein industry so well, all in common sense. Fungi, way to go!

  • @CarolMisseldine-qd6rv
    @CarolMisseldine-qd6rv Год назад +2

    Fascinating, utterly inspiring and hopeful presentation delivered in an easy to understand way. Thank you for your pioneering and compassionate work, Paul.

  • @beverlyness7954
    @beverlyness7954 Год назад +4

    All I can say is WOW! How amazing! Thank you!

  • @brucefriedrich9846
    @brucefriedrich9846 Год назад +3

    Great Talk for anyone interested in the future of food and sustainability - thought-provoking, inspiring, leaves me with a sense of possibility and hope for a better world.

  • @777Bviews
    @777Bviews Год назад +5

    I had this long fungi joke, but I don't have enough shroom to type it

  • @onestepforanimals7286
    @onestepforanimals7286 Год назад +2

    Animals thank you, Paul!

  • @Dr.sheherbano
    @Dr.sheherbano Год назад +1

    Thank you TEDx talks for new information

  • @jenniferdrost4999
    @jenniferdrost4999 Год назад +2

    Amazing talk! Go fungi!!!!

  • @GeminiGargoyle
    @GeminiGargoyle Год назад +2

    Loved this talk, learned a lot and am anxious to see a solution like this take hold, rather than my other go-to solution: a well placed asteroid.😊

  • @linguinelabs
    @linguinelabs Год назад +7

    That was really cool. This is kind of different, but I had an insanely good portobello mushroom burger in Nova Scotia, Canada a few years ago, better than any meat burger I had ever had, so I believe in the possibility that fungi can eclipse meat.

  • @ninaper1965
    @ninaper1965 Год назад +2

    So interesting! 👏👏👏

  • @GreenVegan816
    @GreenVegan816 Год назад +2

    I love this guy!

  • @jug0
    @jug0 Год назад +7

    wait until this guy finds out what happened to the horse prior to the invention of the car

  • @DoniCurkendall
    @DoniCurkendall Год назад +4

    Great talk, Paul. The future is fungi!

    • @mikeskylark1594
      @mikeskylark1594 Год назад +1

      ''Great'' is a horrible understatement, Doni! THIS. IS. GOOOOLD.🤩

  • @teresaalcala6103
    @teresaalcala6103 Год назад +2

    I really loved this idea!❤

  • @Joeshmo772
    @Joeshmo772 Год назад +14

    In 10 years we'll be watching some person on this channel, panicking about humans going extinct, not enough kids being born. Pop growth is topping out. Meat is good, so is fungi. I'll keep eating both.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад

      Meat and fungi together is my fav.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад +1

      You can have both if instead of relying on synthetic chemicals for pest, weed, crop residue and fertility management, use livestock instead.
      Mark Shepard does alley cropping where who grows starches in the form of nuts trees, along with fruit trees and vines, and in the wide alleys between he grows mostly perennial veggies, along with 'weedy' pasture.
      He mob grazes cattle, sheep, pigs, turkeys, etc when the crops are done. He avoids overgrazing because it harms plant roots.
      He uses a device yearly that trims tree roots and keeps them polite, while also helping retain water higher up on the hilly land.
      He also grows mushrooms on the dead trees/tree branches.
      He grows stuff that wants to grow in his area instead of fighting nature.
      Anything that acts fussy is replaced.
      It's a clever method that produces a lot more quality food and soil, with fewer red-line inputs.
      It builds farmer and food resiliency. He is currently expanding to 5 other farms in other states.

  • @jigc23
    @jigc23 Год назад +9

    Is this an anticipation for bugs and cancerous meat lab?

    • @LookingupinJA
      @LookingupinJA Год назад +6

      It sure is … I teach grade 4 and it’s in the reading book that’s it cool to eat bugs …

  • @kaysec
    @kaysec Год назад

    Thank you!!!!

  • @spheniscidae.3402
    @spheniscidae.3402 Год назад

    タイトルすら分からんがリスニング練習の為にとりあえず2倍速で聞くわ。
    きっと1ヶ月後の模試ではリスニングが完璧に聞き取れるようになってる!……といいな。

  • @kristenl2367
    @kristenl2367 Год назад +10

    This is an interesting pitch, but I think there's more to the problem. Our per capita meat consumption is increasing because, like everything today, it is accessible to consumers. We are incredibly disconnected from the production process. We just show up and buy as much as we can from stores that seem to always have a full shelf. Before, if you wanted to eat chicken, pork, or beef, you had to raise the animal yourself, so meat was not an everyday indulgence. We are omnivores, we naturally eat meat, but this level of consumption is not natural. The insustainability of consumerism is what needs to change. Not filling the market with something else to direct our consumption to.

    • @gatrow581
      @gatrow581 Год назад +3

      I think you make a fantastic point however I don’t see why both ideas can’t coexist. We can tackle consumerism and better products at the same time. This exception should be made especially for foods, we don’t need a new iPhone every year but new better food is a good thing.

    • @thomasa5619
      @thomasa5619 Год назад

      @Bitterkind all fruit and vegetables we eat are artificially bred and manipulated and not part of any natural environment either. Your argument about that isn’t special.
      And I can buy kangaroo meat in the supermarket which is harvested from wild animals, living where they belong

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад

      You can have guilt free meat.
      Instead of relying on synthetic chemicals for pest, weed, crop residue and fertility management, use livestock instead.
      Mark Shepard does alley cropping where who grows starches in the form of nuts trees, along with fruit trees and vines, and in the wide alleys between he grows mostly perennial veggies, along with 'weedy' pasture.
      He mob grazes cattle, sheep, pigs, turkeys, etc when the crops are done. He avoids overgrazing because it harms plant roots.
      He uses a device yearly that trims tree roots and keeps them polite, while also helping retain water higher up on the hilly land.
      He also grows mushrooms on the dead trees/tree branches.
      He grows stuff that wants to grow in his area instead of fighting nature.
      Anything that acts fussy is replaced.
      It's a clever method that produces a lot more quality food and soil, with fewer red-line inputs.
      It builds farmer and food resiliency. He is currently expanding to 5 other farms in other states.

    • @devilsolution9781
      @devilsolution9781 Год назад

      ​@Bitterkind meat is low calorie normally, if you dont buy fatty cuts. Lean meat is lower than mostly everything bar green veg. And denser nutritional value.

  • @l0g1cseer47
    @l0g1cseer47 Год назад +1

    Nice one!

  • @MrAlrevilla
    @MrAlrevilla Год назад +1

    Amazing!!!

  • @mohdnorzaihar2632
    @mohdnorzaihar2632 Год назад +3

    i'm just imagine if 10 billion people fasting@30 days each year impact on our human socio-biology-ecology-economy rejuvenate revitalising humanity@natures

    • @infiniteworfare5089
      @infiniteworfare5089 Год назад

      eating a meat heavy diet makes it much easier to do fasting for longer than a day. eating sugary foods or certain plants can make foods even more addictive and lead to binge eating

  • @briannacooper2628
    @briannacooper2628 Год назад

    Thank you Mr. Shaprio. I loved your presentation and the innovative application of technology on food security and health. I would love to see the at home market developed alongside the industrial scale. I, like so many other people who are chronically ill, live with a very narrow group of foods that my body can tolerate. Many people are unfortunately joining me as long COVID triggers Mast Cell Activation Disorder, one of the most devastating idiopathic illnesses that has no cure. This technology could allow people like me grow a healthy food on a medically tolerated substrate (likely cassava) and change our lives and nutrition fundamentally. Thank you again for sharing your work with the us.

  • @SomethinDifferentEnt
    @SomethinDifferentEnt Год назад

    Here We Go 🔥🔥

  • @ihaka439
    @ihaka439 Год назад

    Perfect topic for Eid

  • @adamgibbons4262
    @adamgibbons4262 Год назад +1

    Beefsteak mushrooms? Or lionsmane taste a bit like lobster

  • @PinyinSudoku
    @PinyinSudoku Год назад

    Wow, what a much needed invention! I want my own meat maker, where can I get it... (or rather, when and where)?

  • @epsileth
    @epsileth Год назад +2

    I remember reading about a few companies 3d printing vegan "meat" steaks, and they're close to the real thing.

  • @mobinafht
    @mobinafht 5 месяцев назад

    can you tell us the name of that fungi?

  • @microbemike9693
    @microbemike9693 Год назад +1

    My area

  • @theravensniffer
    @theravensniffer Год назад +1

    It's a fascinating technology and sounds much more palatable than plant based "meat", the only issue I have is with the Idea that this will replace meat almost entirely. Meat is a very different story, as it is impossible to replicate the texture flavor and consistency of meat perfectly. Some people like riding horses and the feel of writing with a quill to this day, despite there being better options for travel and writing. There will always be a large market for meat because unlike travel and writing, the reason people eat meat isn't environmental sustainability, it's because it tastes good. Unlike the quill and car which where tools to fulfill the goal of writing or travel, you aren't improving meat by making it out of fungi, you are just making a new class of protien somewhere between meat and plant "meat".
    So to summarize; meat will never be replaced completely. There will always be a premium for it, even if this technology proves to make a great meat-like alternative.

  • @janetremigio1049
    @janetremigio1049 Год назад +4

    Was this guy send by Bill Gates?

  • @armandocastillorodriguez1731
    @armandocastillorodriguez1731 Год назад

    Hola TEDx

  • @mozezo8
    @mozezo8 Год назад +2

    this types of ideas are great but they need more investments to make it reality and as we experience the high cost of food universally i think more food industrial company might take this step towards support the new ways of making meatlike food.

  • @stanmitchell3375
    @stanmitchell3375 11 месяцев назад +1

    Eating eggs is animal cruelty

  • @drbendaroo9610
    @drbendaroo9610 Год назад +1

    A mushroom walks into a bar, all night he's trying to meet a girl and frustrated, he turns to his friend and says, I don't get it, I can't seem to meet anyone, I can't figure it out, I'm a fungi, I don't need mushroom....

  • @joshwong800
    @joshwong800 Год назад

    Amazing, I'd wish that human moral progress was as fast as technological progress but it seems the proof is in the pen 😅
    If you are not morally bankrupt though, just go Vegan today and help speed up the progress to a humane society.

  • @rev.juliesavoy5817
    @rev.juliesavoy5817 Год назад

    Tempeh anyone?

  • @selvaggiapizzetti897
    @selvaggiapizzetti897 Год назад

    Ain’t no way you want use to eat fungi

  • @schizoalin
    @schizoalin Год назад +6

    No

  • @Charles-sg9zu
    @Charles-sg9zu Год назад +2

    Finally, people don’t need to kill animals 😆

    • @aakuster
      @aakuster Год назад +1

      Millions of animals are killed in the process of agriculture. Jeez. The ignorance of people in this comment section is stunning.😒

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy Год назад +2

    Except livestock is a great way to manage crop residues, fertility, weeds and pests.
    Love mycelium, love better land management more.
    Alley cropping combined with mob grazing is a great way to create soil and healthy soil biota, sequester carbon, boost nutrition of foods, sequester water, build resilience.
    Fungi is good, but fungi only does so much.

  • @johndawson6057
    @johndawson6057 Год назад +1

    This Paul Shapiro seems like fun...gi😅.
    I'll see myself out

  • @nicolasmargottin8982
    @nicolasmargottin8982 Год назад +1

    Sponsored by bigfood©️ and adventist®️

    • @mikeskylark1594
      @mikeskylark1594 Год назад +1

      We could only wish for that... It would be awesome tho.

  • @aliciastanley5582
    @aliciastanley5582 Год назад +5

    Just the “experience “ of meat is not enough for me. I very much want the nutrition pasture raised meat can give me. Faux meat cannot give me that. I need 45 to 50 grams protein per day with the majority from pasture raised meats and or small fish and sockeye salmon and pasture raised eggs and may15 to 25% from healthy plant proteins amount varying from day to day an maybe a day or 2, varying per week with no meat.

    • @kimwarburton8490
      @kimwarburton8490 Год назад +1

      I'm with you on this, i do my best to get as close to this as possible due to financial constraints. I worry that if 'experience meat' becomes the norm my health will plummet and i'll be bedridden again

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад

      You can have both if instead of relying on synthetic chemicals for pest, weed, crop residue and fertility management --use livestock instead.
      Mark Shepard does alley cropping where who grows starches in the form of nuts trees, along with fruit trees and vines, and in the wide alleys between he grows mostly perennial veggies, along with 'weedy' pasture.
      He mob grazes cattle, sheep, pigs, turkeys, etc when the crops are done. He avoids overgrazing because it harms plant roots.
      He uses a device yearly that trims tree roots and keeps them polite, while also helping retain water higher up on the hilly land.
      He also grows mushrooms on the dead trees/tree branches.
      He grows stuff that wants to grow in his area instead of fighting nature.
      Anything that acts fussy is replaced.
      It's a clever method that produces a lot more quality food and soil, with fewer red-line inputs.
      It builds farmer and food resiliency. He is currently expanding to 5 other farms in other states.

    • @aliciastanley5582
      @aliciastanley5582 Год назад

      @@kimwarburton8490 If you look at the faux meats on the market now they are filled with unhealthy things like soy proteins and isolates non organic and hence, filled with cancer causing glysophates and all of the vegetables and grains used are also filled with that and or pesticides. These things must be addressed to save the nutrients profiles of our soil as well as the foods themselves for us and to some important degree on the industrial level our planet as well. I want to say if they made an organic based mushroom faux meat that had a healthy profile I might eat that sometimes as I’ve been eating organic tempeh occasionally now but I have mixed feelings about any soy right now. I’m still thinking that through. I eat ALOT of mushrooms though. I actually make my own morning sausage with 50% ground Turkey and 50% Portabella mushrooms red onion and kale now, lots sausage spices.

  • @Idontwantahandle239
    @Idontwantahandle239 Год назад +12

    Nope. Stop this. Let’s just eat beef that live natural on grass

    • @PossumWrangler
      @PossumWrangler Год назад +2

      Exactly!! The problem isn’t meat eating, it’s the waste that comes from commercial production of meat……which is also a very inhumane way to raise & process livestock.

  • @petestransit
    @petestransit Год назад +2

    I am an EX vegetarian

  • @kimwarburton8490
    @kimwarburton8490 Год назад +5

    what additives stop it tasting like fungi? and give the correct nutrients?
    what about those who are allergic to fungi?
    Are there any nutrition absorption issues for ill people like there is with fake meats?
    Would it be a complete protein food as meat is?
    I am otherwise hopeful and excited about micro-brewing, its very 'star trek'
    Cultured meat is barely better than meat meat IMO because it uses the fluid from around the foetus to signal the cells to grow

  • @boa2112
    @boa2112 Год назад +10

    Why would we want to disrupt the meat industry?

    • @Andytheevien
      @Andytheevien Год назад +9

      Because it's not sustainable.

    • @aakuster
      @aakuster Год назад +4

      ​@Andrijana Stankovska You're WRONG. Probably too lazy to actually research. 😒

  • @Asduyr
    @Asduyr 11 месяцев назад

    Duh go eat a cabbage Im havin beef tonight

  • @freesheep0
    @freesheep0 Год назад +1

    How fungi can disrupt ANY industry.

  • @kalrandom7387
    @kalrandom7387 Год назад +4

    First off NO. Second, what kind of chemicals are you using to grow your mycelium? Since mycelium takes years to fully integrate into a new area! What long-term effects will these new chemical concoctions have on those eating it? I'm all in for some good mushrooms but at the same time eating of cooked meat separated us from the animal world and placed us as the Apex predator of the world. I really don't want to give that title up.

    • @kimwarburton8490
      @kimwarburton8490 Год назад

      i agree, but it was actually consumption of seafoods which gave us such big brains. cooking DOES separate us, but it was our unique ability to run long distances while sweating to cooldown vrs panting which made us apex predators

    • @marckorhammer
      @marckorhammer Год назад

      As if you or me had anything to do with „earning“ that title. Do you think chickens will start terrorizing you if you replace meat with lentils, clean meat or other meat products made without messing with animals?

  • @josklos2798
    @josklos2798 Год назад +3

    predictive programing . eat ze bugz

  • @teresasmith6028
    @teresasmith6028 Год назад

    💚

  • @crtoledo007
    @crtoledo007 Год назад

    No one we thinks on poor baby mushrooms that will never burn

  • @majabalcerzak8222
    @majabalcerzak8222 Год назад

    😍

  • @kyahama6284
    @kyahama6284 Год назад +4

    Not thanks u can keep your electric cars and your fungi

  • @trader2137
    @trader2137 Год назад

    leave the meat alone... i will always keep eating animals as god created them for us to eat

    • @aakuster
      @aakuster Год назад +1

      Animals eat us too😉

  • @markpousard4393
    @markpousard4393 Год назад +1

    I think a few of the selling points and "facts" are incorrect.

  • @homesinlaguna
    @homesinlaguna Год назад +3

    We have the technology to know, humans do not need to eat animal products

    • @kalrandom7387
      @kalrandom7387 Год назад +1

      Are you a vegan? Your picture doesn't look very vegan

    • @lucianaromulus1408
      @lucianaromulus1408 Год назад +4

      We do if we want to remain fully healthy. I'm not for Carnivore or mistreatment of animals, but meat is absolutely necessary for optimum health.

    • @oldchild527
      @oldchild527 Год назад +1

      But sometimes it's really beneficial to ecology, like with red Pigment from cochinilla it's healthy, natural, and edible a great business for locals and it got replaced for quemicals, it makes no sense to me, I'm pro leaving meat but we have to rethink every animal products because it's not always posible to leave them.

  • @marineviewhome7713
    @marineviewhome7713 Год назад

    I feel sorry that many of people are agreeing to this. Anything that is unnatural will cause catastrophic disasters.

  • @thegungadfly8930
    @thegungadfly8930 Год назад +1

    Bs.

  • @bishaboud5821
    @bishaboud5821 Год назад

    ضع

  • @mohamedghithe-tw2tc
    @mohamedghithe-tw2tc Год назад

    God loves you and takes care of you for the arrival of this message to you. God is the one who created this universe and He is the one who controls it. The biggest loss that a person loses in this life is to live while he does not know God and the Messenger of Muhammad, the last of the prophets and the Islamic religion, the last of the heavenly religions. From the great intelligence of any person before he He believes in something or does not believe in it, that he read it, study it, and understand it well, and then he has the choice and judgment on it. I advise you to do so before you do not have time for that.

  • @lidiananicomauri5920
    @lidiananicomauri5920 Год назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @christopherstanford5599
    @christopherstanford5599 Год назад

    🤔🍄🍄🍄🥩🍗🍖🥓 😋 🤗🤗