Does President Trump Have It Wrong on
TikTok?
by Scott S. Powell
In
2020, then President Trump 45 came to understand that TikTok was a creation of
Bytedance, a company controlled by the Chinese government--specifically the CCP.
So, in August of that year he signed an executive order requiring the
CCP-controlled ByteDance to divest TikTok. A month later that order got blocked by
a court injunction. But that was reversed by the Biden administration in
2021.
As
it turned out, the executive order to restructure TikTok was unenforced until 2024,
when the Israeli war against Hamas intensified and TikTok’s distinctly
pro-Palestinian bias, was instrumental in disrupting many college and
university campuses across the U.S. The U.S. Congress proposed and passed the
Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, which
again ordered that ByteDance divest TikTok due to alleged security concerns
and pro-Palestinian bias. The bill was signed into law, and was
upheld by the Supreme Court, following a lawsuit challenge from TikTok.
That law set a deadline of January 19, 2025, for TikTok’s ban in the U.S.
unless it divested itself from the CCP-controlled ByteDance.
The
TikTok ban took another twist on Inauguration Day, January 20, 2025, when Trump
47 signed an executive action that delays enforcement of the TikTok ban for 75
days. Some have observed that Trump thinks well of TikTok presumably because
TikTok delivered a lot of youth votes on November 5.
Trump
is mistaken if he thinks that the restructuring of TikTok can be pulled off quickly, given the
risk of residual backdoors to China that are likely baked into the system. Everyone
understands that Facebook harvests data from users’ devices even when they are
not on the Facebook site. According to Sam Faddis, a 20-year veteran of the
CIA, Tik Tok is four to five times more intrusive than Facebook in harvesting
data from Americans who have downloaded the TikTok app. And that means that all
such Americans’ email, text messages and other information gets sucked out of
their devices and ends up on servers in China.
By
some estimates, half the U.S. population, about
170 million people, are subscribers to TikTok, A good number of those users under 35 years
of age are seemingly addicted to TikTok videos, which are short and cover a
range of subjects—some silly, some controversial, and others with commercial
value. But make no mistake, the TikTok
app together with its algorithms that
were developed by Chinese engineers have created weapons aimed at the heart of
the United States.
Those
who think this is a free speech issue are mistaken. TikTock is a backdoor
attack on unwitting Americans by a hostile communist regime. The now former FBI
director, Chris Wray publicly testified numerous times that “the CCP dedicates
more resources in cyber-attacks against the United States than they do against
all other countries on the planet combined.”
At
a recent meeting of the Committee on the Present Danger: China, Dr. John
Lenczowski reminded attendees that much of the thinking of the Chinese
Communist Party is rooted in a long tradition dating back 2500 years to the war
fighting philosophy of Sun Tzu, encapsulated in his written work, The Art of
War, which elaborates on various approaches to strategic deception in order
to defeat the enemy without having to fire a shot.
An
important part of this Chinese unrestricted warfare against the U.S. is to
deceive Americans into believing that mainland China is just a normal state—a
country that honors international norms. The net result of some two generations
of this deception warfare has been a psychological disarmament of the United
States.
Lenczowski
points out that TikTok is used as an avenue of cooptation of an important
segment of the U.S. population. In various videos, TikTok has subliminally
discredited the American system of democracy and constitutional order. At times,
such as the early period of the George Floyd riots of 2020, TikTok leaders
distributed videos to those whom they believed were likely to riot in favor of
Black Lives Matter. And because TikTok had so much accurate information on
Americans through their many years of data collection, TikTok decision-makers were
able to target likely rioters. They also provided professional advice on how to
do maximum damage while keeping the perpetrators safe from being arrested.
Another
speaker, Grant Newsham, a retired colonel in the U.S. Marine Corps, focused on
the CCP’s use of TikTok to indoctrinate the U.S. military, pointing out their
ability to access the minds of all the nearly 1.3 million active-duty troops
and 768,000 national guard and reserve members, as well as new recruits. He
concluded by noting that “you just have to manipulate the military a
little bit to make a military much less effective.”
In delaying the banning and dismantling TikTok, President Trump needs to determine whether the kind of weapon that the that the CCP has created in TikTok can be rendered benign, even if it becomes wholly owned by an American company. The Chinese are notorious for welding backdoors into their systems as they did with Huawei. We chose not to take a chance with Huawei, and we should not take a chance with TikTok when vestiges of Chinese deceptive engineering could still be present and operated.
__________________________
Scott S. Powell is senior fellow at Discovery Institute and a
member of the Committee on the Present Danger-China. His timeless book,
Rediscovering America, has been #1 Amazon New Release in the history genre
for eight weeks. https://www.amazon.com/dp/1637581599. Reach him at scottp@discovery.org
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