The Ukiah Daily Journal

The futility of banning Tiktok

-

With hefty bipartisan backing, the House has passed a bill that would force TikTok — the wildly popular Chineseown­ed social media app — to sell out or face a ban. Normally, a measure that commands that kind of support makes sense. This one does not, and it should die in the Senate.

The measure reflects an overreacti­on against unproven allegation­s, and it clearly violates the First Amendment guarantee of free speech. Rep. Mike Gallagher, the Wisconsin Republican who sponsored the bill, justifies it by saying, “TikTok is digital fentanyl addicting our kids.”

But he should read the Constituti­on. That document protects speech that is unpopular, obnoxious — even subversive.

“We're deeply disappoint­ed that our leaders are once again attempting to trade our First Amendment rights for cheap political points during an election year,” says Jenna Leventoff, senior policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union. “Just because the bill sponsors claim that banning TikTok isn't about suppressin­g speech, there's no denying that it would do just that.”

Her view has already been endorsed by three federal judges. After Montana voted to ban TikTok, District Judge Donald Molloy blocked the measure last November and wrote that the law “oversteps state power and infringes on the Constituti­onal right of users and businesses (and) likely violates the First Amendment.”

Back in 2020, after President Trump tried to ban TikTok through an executive order, he was thwarted by Judge Carl Nichols — a Trump appointee — who derided the action as “arbitrary and capricious.”

Another federal judge, Wendy Beetleston­e, ruled in favor of TikTok influencer­s who had challenged the ban.

“Without access to the TikTok app, Plaintiffs would lose access to all of these followers, as well as to the profession­al opportunit­ies afforded by TikTok,” Beetleston­e wrote.

As these judges indicate, preserving TikTok is not just a free speech issue. The app — which is used by about 170 million Americans — is a major economic and cultural force.

“TikTok has cultivated a culture and community that no other platform has come close to replicatin­g,” Kate Lindsay writes in The Atlantic. “There's a speed to how TikTok facilitate­s conversati­ons and trends, and its algorithm is unnervingl­y good at picking up on a user's interests and showing them what they want to see.”

“TikTok is where a lot of young people have found their community, their voice, their income,” adds Angela Watercutte­r in Wired. “Eradicatin­g TikTok … rips up a piece of the social fabric.”

It would also rip up an important source of political informatio­n. According to a Pew survey, 14% of Americans now get their news from TikTok, but that rises to one-third of voters under 30. That's why President Biden has decided to play the hypocrisy card, vowing to sign the TikTok ban if it reaches his desk while aggressive­ly using the platform to spread his campaign message.

The president's reelection campaign has started a TikTok account, @BidenHQ, which now has a quarter of a million followers. His team has been posting messages from Biden, using an informal and occasional­ly humorous style, while also inviting TikTok influencer­s to the White House for policy briefings and political pep talks.

Cameron Joseph, writing in the Columbia Journalism Review, notes that since Russia clearly meddled in the 2016 election, Americans should be wary of any attempt by China to disrupt the fall campaign using TikTok.

“But that doesn't change the reality of 2024 politics,” he wrote. “Biden needs to win back young voters. They're on TikTok. And unless and until that platform goes away, Democrats need to be where the voters are.”

China is clearly America's enemy — economical­ly, militarily, even morally — and supporters of the TikTok ban have played on those fears to advance their legislatio­n. But the specific arguments against TikTok remain largely undocument­ed.

One is that Beijing could somehow use TikTok to harvest intelligen­ce data that compromise­s national security or to spread destabiliz­ing misinforma­tion. However, writes CNN: “So far, the U.S. government has not publicly presented any evidence the Chinese government has accessed TikTok user data.”

Lawmakers stressed that Tik

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States