• 3 hours ago
Transcript
00:00The American Pronunciation Guide Presents
00:03The American Pronunciation Guide Presents
00:05The American Pronunciation Guide Presents
00:07The American Pronunciation Guide Presents
00:09American Pronunciation Guide Presents
00:11The Little
00:13¢¢
00:15?
00:18?
00:21["Pomp and Circumstance"]
00:51["Pomp and Circumstance"]
01:21["Pomp and Circumstance"]
01:51["Pomp and Circumstance"]
02:21["Pomp and Circumstance"]
02:51I'm not going to be able to do it.
03:10Their workshop is the ground.
03:12They should be in their own enclosures,
03:14managing the cattle, preparing the equipment for the upcoming sowing,
03:18and preparing them for the great spring campaign.
03:34They come here because the farmer not only produces,
03:37but also has to sell his products and get the means of production.
03:48A couple, three of them.
03:52They carry out a muzzle walk along the offices and offices of the officials,
03:56who examine the degree of commitment of the supplier,
03:59and check his entire past in terms of obligatory and contracted supplies.
04:04Here you are.
04:05Oh, he's gone.
04:06He's gone.
04:07He's gone to the collective farm council.
04:09It was Zalewski Piotr.
04:1017 kilograms.
04:11He's gone to the collective farm.
04:13He'll be back soon.
04:14Coal?
04:15Yes.
04:17It's shining.
04:18Pasha, I think it's going to be there too.
04:21It's going to be there for the end.
04:24From the foggy figures, the flowers finally emerge,
04:27allowing the farmer to raise money
04:29and get a share of the contents of fertilizers and fuel.
04:351,360 liters.
04:371,786 liters.
04:41What of the fact that they've learned how to use poplons,
04:44interplons, and sow greens?
04:46That they've studied the strategy of cultivation and the chemistry of crops
04:49in their neighbors' books?
04:51The meaning of numerous papers is often not deciphered.
04:55In fact, too much is required of them.
04:59It's been standing since 9 o'clock,
05:01and once at 3 o'clock in the afternoon.
05:03Whether it's food or not, they cut off 3 percent.
05:06And the contract clearly states that
05:08the farmer is allowed to eat 3 percent of what he sees.
05:11Here, he doesn't care, he doesn't even look at the feed.
05:13And if he notices that he has a bigger belly...
05:15He leaves it for another 3 hours.
05:17And at 10 o'clock in the evening.
05:19And they don't care at all.
05:21They are separate, like kings.
05:23Those who went to sow, they got the same.
05:25In the beginning, when there was little,
05:27like now,
05:28not so long ago, I put in two sacks.
05:31He looked, two in three sacks.
05:33One, two, the other, three.
05:35I took it for the second week, and it went to two.
05:37He didn't eat for a week.
05:39There's no way.
05:41To get a better class.
05:43On the other hand, they say,
05:45we don't have anything to do with it.
05:47It's specifically cut and classified,
05:49so that there's less.
05:51And on the other hand, they shout,
05:53to grow, as much as possible.
05:55I don't know how it is.
05:59Because if such a person is not suitable,
06:01he cannot work.
06:03If I don't understand the role, I don't do it.
06:06There are people who are capable,
06:08and they can work in this field.
06:10And if they are not capable,
06:12they are just hungry for an hour,
06:14thirsty for an hour,
06:16and they freeze on the street.
06:18I work, I work to the end.
06:20It started at six.
06:22My husband left on the 15th,
06:24on the 15th, on the 4th,
06:26and he's still standing.
06:28More work, more income.
06:30One day a week.
06:32And a man has to work 24 hours,
06:3424 hours a week.
06:36How long will the farm run out?
06:38Six hundred days a year.
06:40If it was, it would catch up with the time.
06:42The point of purchase
06:44is usually a few kilometers from the GES,
06:46where the cash register is located.
06:48The last window and desk
06:50on the way to the sale.
06:52Here you go.
06:54Oh, it's here, I wrote it somewhere else.
06:56Yes, exactly.
06:58Two hundred and fifty.
07:00Seventy groszy.
07:02Well, ladies and gentlemen,
07:04we're closing the cash register.
07:06There's still a lot left.
07:08Mrs. Cashier,
07:10for the mercy of the lady here,
07:12let her pay us.
07:14Wait, wait,
07:16maybe there will be a little more mercy.
07:18There is mercy on the man.
07:20He's been standing since nine o'clock.
07:22And besides, someone is doing someone a favor.
07:24You give money for your own.
07:26You give money for your own.
07:30The road you have to go through
07:32to buy the means of production
07:34is not short either.
07:36Again, kilometers spent on the cart,
07:38hours of waiting in line
07:40and hard physical effort.
07:46I'll go again.
07:48Twice.
07:50Twice again.
07:56Did he smoke or not?
07:58Yes.
08:00Not close.
08:02Hey, give me some.
08:04Okay.
08:06How much do you charge now?
08:08How much do you charge?
08:10Five.
08:12That's right.
08:14It's easier to carry out
08:16when there's something fresh to put in.
08:18I can help you.
08:22Why?
08:24Don't feel sorry for the snow.
08:26Don't feel sorry for it.
08:28You have to get it out of here anyway.
08:30Well, dear, it's snow.
08:32It's a decoration of interest.
08:34No matter how much snow you put in,
08:36it won't affect you anyway.
08:38Okay.
08:40Okay.
08:42How much does it cost?
08:4460,000 probably only.
08:46This year it's probably planned
08:48and it's supposed to be.
08:50It would be easier to put it in
08:52than to carry this box.
08:54Well, now the weight will go there.
08:56But I still have to load.
08:58I can't arrange one cart at a time.
09:00One after another.
09:02Everyone little by little.
09:16Okay.
09:28Thank you very much.
09:30And what about those carts?
09:32There's still a lot of them.
09:34Six.
09:46I'd like everything to be disassembled today.
09:50And fresh tomorrow.
10:12Some people try to buy coal
10:14to get something else in the GES.
10:16To get a belt or artificial fertilizers.
10:18There hasn't been one so far
10:20until it was used as a bonus.
10:22We sold it and now there isn't one.
10:24But there will be one soon.
10:26Is there hope?
10:28There is hope, yes.
10:30I mean, is there a super machine?
10:32Not yet.
10:34We've already sold it.
10:36It's supposed to be soon,
10:38but we won't say when.
10:40And is there a Tramon Hall?
10:42You can come.
10:44You can come and take all the fertilizers.
10:46That's nice.
10:48Yes.
10:50And those two,
10:52we don't have them yet,
10:54but we'll have them soon.
10:56We don't have a super machine anymore.
10:58It's already sold out.
11:00It will be, but...
11:02We can't say when exactly,
11:04because we don't know when it will be sent to us.
11:06We don't have a Tramon Hall either.
11:08We don't have a Tramon Hall either.
11:10We don't have one yet.
11:12We don't have one.
11:14We don't know when it will be sent either.
11:16According to the distributor,
11:18they will send it when it's due,
11:20but we can't say when it will be sent.
11:22Goodbye.
11:26Good day, sir.
11:28Good day.
11:30How are you interested
11:32in this fertilizers?
11:34Is there a lot of it?
11:36We don't have a Tramon Hall at all.
11:38How much is it?
11:40It's not enough?
11:42Those who were smarter
11:44bought it and took it away.
11:46It may not be enough for everyone at once,
11:48but there is hope that it will be enough.
11:50We don't have a Tramon Hall.
11:52And we can run.
11:54And where is that lady?
11:56She's in the gym.
11:58She has to stand for a week.
12:00If I show up for a week,
12:02one car will be enough.
12:04I just go to the radio,
12:06hang on a piece of paper,
12:08the trumpet won't answer
12:10that it's a lie.
12:12If the paper doesn't answer,
12:14it's not true.
12:16What about the fertilizers?
12:18That guy from the band
12:20took it on the field.
12:22They put so many tons of superphosphate.
12:24What did they do with superphosphate?
12:26As a caretaker.
12:28Now they overestimate it
12:30as if it's worth nothing.
12:32They put it in the spring.
12:34Our skin is all cracked.
12:36We have to work it out and bring it here.
12:38But if we want to, we can buy it.
12:40I don't know how a farmer
12:42would look at it,
12:44what a mess it would be.
12:46There were no warehouses.
12:48Once you could carry fertilizers
12:50in a man's barn.
12:52I love God.
12:54When I look at it all,
12:56it's better not to come with me.
12:58Even though I'm a useless man,
13:00I'll go to heaven soon.
13:04A farmer who doesn't know
13:06the scientific methods of cultivation
13:08and breeding,
13:10who rides a one-horse horse,
13:12weakly fertilizes and smokes,
13:14doesn't collect much
13:16and eats his own crop.
13:18But where there is a breakthrough,
13:20purchase and distribution
13:22become a narrow throat.
13:24The village, awakened from the lethargy,
13:26demands machines, fuel, lubricants.
13:28It demands artificial fertilizers
13:30and pesticides.
13:3270 to 90 working days a year.
13:34These days are the time
13:36stolen from his workshop.
13:38The time stolen from all of us.
14:02© transcript Emily Beynon