Trump Spills The Beans On The Real Reason For The Threatened TikTok Ban

And spoiler alert, it does not sound like it has anything to do with National Security.

As I wrote in my last blog post, “…forcing the sale of TikTok is akin to an act of piracy by the U.S. government. It is a seizure of a valuable international brand to enrich some American interest, as yet to be named.” This was obvious! So why did the U.S. Supreme Court go along with the ruse and uphold the ban?

My previous blog post predicted everything that Trump would accidentally(?) admit to today during his Oval Office news conference where he signed a bunch of executive orders. I’ve added the question mark above because with Trump who knows what is an accident or on purpose. One could reasonably see this “accidental admission” as being a warning to other foreign companies that if they are valuable and doing business in the U.S. that some lawmaker might come up with a trumped-up reason why the U.S. gets 50% of that company’s value.

On January 18th I wrote, “I think it is safe to say that the TikTok user demographics do not align with Senior Pentagon or Government Officials, the kind of people who would be valuable assets for a foreign government to track.” Today, Trump said, “And remember, TikTok is largely about kids… young kids… if China is going to get information about young kids… I don’t know [he waves his hands around and mutters a little] I think… I think… to be honest with you… I think we have bigger problems than that…” The U.S. Justice Department tried to sneak in National Security by arguing essentially that one day, one of these kids could be in the military, and the Chinese government could use data they collected on that person when they were a child, to exploit them as adult. The fact that the Supreme Court seems to have bought that argument is incomprehensible.

When did we start regulating products based on some future harm, when we cannot identify the individual who would be harmed, or the possible harm they may suffer. If this is the new consumer protection standard that the Supreme Courts wants to apply then absolutely they should rule that cigarettes should be banned. We know that children exposed to cigarette smoke are being harmed. One day it could even lead to them developing cancer. We do not know the exact harm, or which exact child will be harmed by cigarette smoke. But we have a hypothetical child at risk so, Supreme Court, get off your ass and start protecting that hypothetical kid.

Again, from January 18th I wrote, “What is clear is that the U.S. legislation is designed to threaten any foreign app with a forced sale to a U.S. company if that foreign app is deemed to be a threat to national security. In many ways it feels like eMcCarthyism but with an international trade component allowing American companies to force a fire sale on any foreign assets they wish to own.” As Trump says in this video clip, “… tell you what… every rich person has called me about TikTok…”

As the video goes on, to my ears, things start to sound a lot like extortion. Trump says, “… no you’d take 50% of TikTok for the approval…” The “approval” means a promise from the Federal Government not to shut the app down in the U.S. As Trump continues “… but the U.S. essentially would be paid for doing that, half of the value of TikTok… [removed section] … but there is big value in TikTok if it gets approved, if it doesn’t get approved there is no value, so if we create that value why aren’t we entitled to like half?…”

I am trying to figure out how this is different from the stereotyped movie extortion ring where “guys” enter a business and say [with a thick New York accent] “You got a nice business here, it would be a shame if something were to happen to it.”

Has the Supreme Court just legitimized the U.S. Government using made up National Security concerns and protecting hypothetical children to allow the U.S. Government to extort any valuable foreign business?

The Reasons Why TikTok Lost

The entire U.S. case against TikTok is a sham. Whatever the reasons are for why the U.S. Justice Department went after TikTok, one can be fairly certain that it had little to do with National Security.

According to http://www.unchainedmusic.io “The user base is notably diverse, with 36.2% of users aged 18-24 and 34% aged 25-34, highlighting its strong presence among young adults.” I think it is safe to say that the TikTok user demographics do not align with Senior Pentagon or Government Officials, the kind of people who would be valuable assets for a foreign government to track.

More importantly there are far more effective covert ways of tracking someone via their cell phone as Journalist Ronan Farrow as reported on.

But maybe most importantly the Pentagon had already banned TikTok on Government devices in 2019 and the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act (PAFACA) was first introduced in Congress as H.R. 7521 on March 5, 2024. So five years after the Pentagon had already acted to protect troops and “National Security,” Congress comes along demanding that ByteDance divest itself from TikTok or face a nationwide ban.

What is suspicious is that Congress did not include in this legislation robust data collection restrictions for all cell phone apps, something that would have helped all Americans feel safer using their cell phones. I asked Google Gemini how the EU handles these kinds of concerns and Gemini responded “The DSA and GDPR have a broader scope than PAFACA, addressing a wider range of online harms and privacy concerns beyond just foreign ownership.

What is clear is that the U.S. legislation is designed to threaten any foreign app with a forced sale to a U.S. company if that foreign app is deemed to be a threat to national security. In many ways it feels like eMcCarthyism but with an international trade component allowing American companies to force a fire sale on any foreign assets they wish to own. And it does this without really protecting Americans or National Security because once those foreign assets are owned by an American company the American company will be allowed to continue to secretly track their users and sell their data.

And because the U.S. data protection laws are so lax, a U.S. company could send its user data to China for processing and analysis. So, ByteDance could be forced to sell TikTok to a U.S. company who could then turn around and contract with ByteDance to process the user data for them. I mean, ByteDance would already have all the tools needed to do that.

The mistake that ByteDance made was that they hung their argument on the 1st Amendment. The problem is that National Security already trumps the 1st Amendment. So, before one would have the chance of winning on 1st Amendment grounds, one was going to have to destroy the National Security argument. But I think once you get past the sham argument of National Security, the problem with the 1st Amendment is that while Americans are guaranteed the right to speak, they are not guaranteed a venue to speak through. And this is all important. It is a right that one cannot exercise without a “megaphone,” but a “megaphone” is not guaranteed as part of the 1st Amendment.

The New York Times, quite a big “megaphone” for certain people’s right to speak, could close down tomorrow and go out of business, and that would not be found to infringe on the journalists from the Times “right to speak.” Those journalists can continue to speak in other forums. Just like TikTok users can continue to create content in other apps. Their right to speak has not been infringed by the Government forcing TikTok to shut down.

If I were ByteDance I would have primarily argued equal protection based on non-discrimination. The reality is that all cell phone apps track user data. Apps made by companies all over the world are all doing the same kind of tracking. The proper course for the U.S. Government to take so they are not gaming the system – i.e. so that the Government is not picking winners and losers in the cell phone app industry – is for Congress to pass laws which govern what all companies can do with the data they are collecting on U.S. citizens. These laws should be silent on the purpose of the app or the ownership of the app.

For example, it would be a clear violation of Federal law to say that any app that is owned by a person of Asian heritage is banned in the United States. In fact, it would be a violation of Federal law to say that any app that is owned by a person of Chinese heritage is banned in the United States. It would also be a violation of Federal law to ban any app that included videos of people dancing.

The argument that I would have made in defense of TikTok is that there are ways of protecting the data of U.S. citizens through strong data protection laws and agreements. I know that this was one of their arguments. But I would argue that forcing the sale of TikTok is akin to an act of piracy by the U.S. government. It is a seizure of a valuable international brand to enrich some American interest, as yet to be named. That it is based in a long standing American hatred of Communism and a jingoistic stereotyping of people of Chinese heritage as being subservient to the government of China. While the 21st century reality is that Chinese companies conduct business all around the globe and follow the local laws of the countries where they operate. And, if the U.S. Government does not believe that these local laws are sufficient to protect its citizens or its national security the proper recourse is to strengthen the laws that all foreign companies must follow when doing business inside of the United States.