The US House of Representatives' decision to ban TikTok is part of escalating trade tensions between the United States and China. It also reflects the growing concerns over data security for both nations and their citizens and the principle of reciprocity in such matters.
As tension between the countries continues to escalate amid a microchip and semiconductor war, the full implications of a TikTok ban, should it be passed into law, remain to be seen.
Congress passed the bill with an overwhelming majority (352 congresspeople supported it, with only 65 opposed) despite the Democrats' recognition of TikTok's power to rally its voter base. Joe Biden even recently created a TikTok account for himself in an attempt to court the youth vote.
Lawmakers argue that any popular platform or technological software operating on its soil should be subject to Silicon Valley's jurisdiction and the purview of US intelligence or the National Security Agency.
Historically, companies like Google, Microsoft, AOL, Facebook, and Skype, among others, have cooperated in data collection, manipulation, and sometimes hacking, aligning with US interests. However, TikTok doesn’t fall under this category.
Nefarious motive
However, beyond the bilateral tension between the US and China, the crusade against TikTok seems to have a far more nefarious motive: to crack down on pro-Palestinian sentiment.
The app has seen a surge of pro-Palestinian content being pushed since the onset of Israel's brutal war on Gaza. For every pro-Israeli post, there have been 54 pro-Palestinian posts, which have unnerved the pro-Israeli lobby in the US, which has, for decades, been largely successful at controlling the narrative.
The ability of youth to access social media partly explains the correlation between the youth and their more critical stance on Israel and American support for the Jewish state.
Social media, particularly TikTok, has successfully rallied the masses into action over Israel's war on Gaza. Protests against Israeli actions have swept the nation across state border lines, demographics, and different social justice groups.