TikTok ban finds root in xenophobia, fear of Gen Z

Will Groves, Opinion Editor

TikTok’s 150 million U.S. users could find themselves without their favorite app after a highly aggressive congressional hearing about its potential security risks.

   TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew detailed the privacy policies of the app and the speculated relationship to the Chinese Communist Party during a March 23 hearing held by the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

   The committee’s speculation is fueled by TikTok’s parent company, ByteDance, locating its headquarters in Beijing. The concern over ByteDance comes from a Chinese law that states any Chinese company must turn over all user data if the Chinese government requests it. This sentiment seems worrying at first glance, but TikTok has begun storing all U.S. user data in the storage platform Oracle. This data-shifting plan is known as Project Texas.

   The hearing itself was seemingly decided from the start. Chair Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Washington, began the hearing by claiming TikTok should be banned, which set the tone for an extremely contentious hearing with very little time for Chew to respond to the representatives’ targeted questions. The representatives bombarded Chew with seemingly unrelated questions about communism and even how wi-fi in the home works. 

   This congressional hearing proves two things to the U.S. public: our legislators do not understand how social media apps like TikTok work or how digital technology operates. They should not be making decisions on either. 

   The U.S. Senate has already taken action against foreign tech countries with legislation. The RESTRICT Act, if passed, gives the federal government the ability to regulate tech in six competing countries, including China. This bill gives President Joe Biden the means to ban TikTok in the United States, and it has his support. 

   Facebook’s parent company Meta fell into hot water with the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence for possibly opening user data to developers in China and Russia. The committee treated Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg with similar disdain, but no regulations came out of the committee’s hearings. 

   Chew’s hearing was wholly unfair, specifically meant to make TikTok and Chew look dangerous and irresponsible. Aside from the mispronunciation of Chew’s name, the hearing was riddled with anti-Chinese rhetoric, even though Chew is from Singapore. 

   Republican politicians have something to gain from the banning of TikTok. The app has been used to rally political action against former President Donald Trump. Trump’s 2020 political rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, may have failed because of a viral TikTok calling members of Gen Z to sign up for multiple free tickets to the event, according to CNN. Trump’s campaign manager bragged about over 1 million people signing up for the event just for the 19,000-person event center not to be filled with avid fans. 

   TikTok can and has been used  for political action and sharing of political information, especially among younger voters, which scares our politicians.

   The banning of TikTok is expected to come with many challenges. Trump attempted a ban on TikTok in 2020, but it was overturned by two district court judges in Pennsylvania and Washington. If Biden does decide to ban the app, he will likely face multiple First Amendment challenges from citizens who feel as though their outlets of communication have been cut off. To successfully ban TikTok, the government must prove the danger of TikTok outweighs free speech of millions of Americans. 

   We at The News believe banning TikTok is an extreme restriction on the free speech rights of over 150 million U.S. citizens, and it fails to meet the requirements for doing so 

   TikTok poses no real threat to U.S. citizens and any concerns with the sharing of data can be easily solved by storing the data on American soil. This proposed TikTok ban is anti-communist and anti-Chinese hysteria disguised as national privacy protection by legislators who need their grandchildren to help them open their Facebook accounts.

   A specter is haunting the U.S. government—the specter of dancing videos and food tutorials. TikTok poses no real threat to American citizens and the U.S. government is trying to  regulate a nonexistent communist villain.

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