I took a closer look at the account. I still think it's a fake account, run by a Somali. Because her twitter name is the same as the bio of the girl she quoted, something about being a strict woman.
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All the followers are recent and lots of them unfollow, they don't even know the person behind the account. So it's just random followers she says in her tweets.
Also why would someone who retweets religious stuff and reminders of Allah on her timeline say something so out of pocket about a demographic and Allah's creation. It's easy to see its an account doing a poor impression.
Look at these tweets, its as if they are really trying to sell to people that its is a real girl behind the account. ''All my tweets r girly'' like what lool.
But yeah the last two tweets actually reads as if the whole purpose behind the account was to pretend to be a brown muslimah and insult a specific male demographic under the guise of ''i dislike men'' ''They are not my men'' . It's easy to laugh dismissively at the reactions her tweet receive if you are a fake account because nothing is directed at you or where you are really from.
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I don't think it's the Somali community being necessarily drawn to negativity, the whole platform is like that. What drives engagement is saying crude edgy outlandish controversial takes and people will line up to like rt and be in the quotes, it's the nature of the beast.
Humans all have a negativity bias, we are more likely to fixate on something negative than something positive because its rooted in an evolutionary reaction to prevent and detect danger. That's really what these applications tap into psychologically to get people to use it more and more.
Also anonymity makes it so people can just create fake accounts, faceless accounts and bots as well. Which just creates a fake digital dimension to these interactions.