Read the excerpt from "Social Media Made the Arab Spring, But Couldn't Save It" by Jessi Hempel. Even when activists are able to get their messages out, they have trouble galvanizing people to actually take action. The sentiments that gain the largest audiences often contain religious elements, according to Mansour Al-hadj, who is a director at the Middle East Media Research Institute. "The message by itself without any religious element in it, wouldn’t work in the long run,” he says. "The activists’ accounts on Twitter and Facebook are very active and they have a lot of followers, but they cannot drive masses,” he says, because their sentiments are more moderate. Laced through media coverage of the Arab Spring was what turned out to be the naïve hope that people were inherently, unequivocally good and that unleashing their collective consciousness via social media would naturally result in good things happening. But it turns out that consciousness was not so collective after all. The tools that catalyzed the Arab Spring, we've learned, are only as good or as bad as those who use them. And as it turns out, bad people are also very good at social media. Militant groups like the Islamic State have been reported to recruit converts using Facebook and Twitter and use encrypted communications technology to coordinate attacks. What reasons does the author give to support the claim that it is difficult for a message to move people to take action? Select two options. an opinion from an expert on what types of messages inspire people to make changes a description of how the Islamic State and other militant groups fail to effect change an explanation of why social media messages that are not extreme are sometimes ineffective a quotation from an expert on why postings without religious elements work in the short term a clarification that social media outlets such as Twitter generally help create positive changes
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1. The message by itself without any religious element in it, wouldn’t work in the long run.
2. The activists’ accounts on Twitter and Facebook are very active and they have a lot of followers, but they cannot drive masses.
Explanation:
The young generation who protested in the Arab Spring were less known. Their stories were less heard. So media through the social media sites like Facebook, Twitter and Instagram etc spread their stories to the world.
As a result, the local journalism fell down. No one was interested in reading the local magazines and newspaper that only focused on the popular protesting figures. Their stories were known but the young protestor gained new followers who wanted to see their struggle.
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