USA TODAY US Edition

Congress wants to banish TikTok, and Meta should be next

- Sara Pequeño Follow USA TODAY elections columnist Sara Pequeño on X, formerly Twitter, @sara__pequeno and Facebook facebook.com/PequenoWri­tes.

Congress can’t agree on anything. They can’t agree on gun violence, health care, economics or foreign policy.

They can barely avoid a government shutdown.

Apparently, the only thing they can agree on is banning TikTok.

On Wednesday, the House of Representa­tives passed bipartisan legislatio­n that could practicall­y ban the video platform in the United States after years of hand-wringing over the app’s ties to China.

Unlike Meta, X (formerly Twitter) and similar social media companies, TikTok’s parent company ByteDance is headquarte­red in Beijing.

Also, unlike Meta and X, TikTok is predominan­tly populated by young people.

Both of the other social media platforms pose risks to national security, but they are based in the United States.

And, maybe more important, these legislator­s love Facebook and Instagram. They’ve run campaigns using Twitter.

They know how all of these U.S.based apps work, because they have beabandoni­ng come part of our daily lives over two decades.

These representa­tives may ask Mark Zuckerberg to attend congressio­nal hearings about the dangers of social media, but they wouldn’t dare consider Meta.

It doesn’t matter that Facebook sold user data that ultimately led to a disinforma­tion campaign that landed Donald Trump in the White House, and it doesn’t matter that Instagram is just as psychologi­cally damaging for young people.

I understand the theory behind banning TikTok.

If there were a large-scale data breach or the possibilit­y of spyware, it would be impossible to punish the people behind the company in court.

Unfortunat­ely, the threat of legal action has not made U.S.-based social media sites safer.

It would behoove Congress to focus on actual issues, like the people dying because of the money we have invested in foreign military operations or the loss of women’s body autonomy.

Instead, they want to pick apart an app that they don’t know how to use and don’t want to learn more about.

 ?? JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY ?? Demonstrat­ors rally to support TikTok outside the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.
JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY Demonstrat­ors rally to support TikTok outside the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.
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