Small Change: Why the Revolution Will not be Tweeted
Summary: In this article “Small Change” by Malcolm Gladwell
begins with a protest started by 4 African-American college students. One of
the students ordered a coffee of which the waitress replied with, “Sorry we
don’t serve Negro here,” where the four students decided to stand their ground
and ignore all threats. Many days later the protest expanded from four people
to a somewhat seventy thousand people, running from North Carolina all the way
to west Texas. This whole protest happened in the early 1960’s, where acts like
this were considered a civil-rights war, and the entire time this happened,
they did it without e-mail, texting, Facebook, or Twitter. This is what an act
of activism looks like, something we don’t see very often in today’s media.
Mark Pfeifle , former national-security advisor, suggested that Twitter allows
the shy and unheard be noticed and heard, and later nominated Twitter for the
Nobel Peace Prize. Back to the original protest of 1964, it is stated that the
four students, during the first few days, were given death threats but refused
to moved, even without the knowledge of the threats being bluffs or not.
Everything that happened back with those college students are most likely not
to happen in today’s social media, for to many people believe everything they
see on the internet.
Respond:I can’t imagine how those students took place
during the activism during that time period because there was no so called
social media as of today, ever where you go you’ll see people with social media
device in hand. Social media has brought
people around the world to come together, shared information, news around the
world, can see what’s going on in our community.
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