Discussion:
Mentioned in Dispatches
(too old to reply)
Smolley
2024-04-25 05:52:11 UTC
Permalink
On Tuesday, the US Senate passed a legislation that would ban popular
short video app TikTok, the most downloaded social media platform on the
planet, in the United States unless the app's Chinese owner ByteDance
sells it within a year. The legislation was included as part of a larger
$95 billion package that provides foreign aid to Ukraine and Israel, among
others, which was passed in the US House of Representatives over the
weekend. The package will become law once US President Joe Biden signs it,
which he said he would.

The bill originated from Representative Mike Gallagher, who along with
many others, pushed the false assumption that the app is controlled by
China's government and subsequently pushed a bill demanding it be sold at
gunpoint in order to continue to operate in the US, where it has 170
million users. With a Senate vote likely to follow, Biden stated he would
support the bill. However, legal experts earlier told the mainstream media
they do not believe such a bill will survive a legal challenge because of
the implications it has for the First Amendment.

The idea that the US believes it has a right to extort a company into
selling a hugely successful operation is an act of extreme arrogance,
entitlement, and unbridled callousness. Not only does it illustrate the
absurd levels of irrational paranoia and McCarthyism that have gripped
Washington DC, but also the total lack of respect it has for China and its
people. Using the auspices of the Communist Party of China as a justifying
premise for anything in the country they do not like, these kinds of
politicians believe they have a right to undermine, trample upon and
diminish anything China has produced which is equal to or better than what
is produced in the US, showing the country's hegemonic mindset.

This kind of attitude, the belief that China must be "coerced" into
handing over its economic assets and resources to the West, has been
inflicted on the country over the centuries and was most blatant in what
China describes as "the century of humiliation" when Western powers
brutally subjugated the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) into accepting their will
and exploited according to their interests. This is most famously depicted
through the Opium Wars, whereby the British Empire waged war on China for
its refusal to open its markets up to opium and forced the Chinese into
the first "Unequal Treaty" which not only imposed the export on them by
force, but also ceded Hong Kong as a port for doing so.

Other such "unequal treaties" over the years created other foreign
concessions in China, allowed Westerners in China to be exempt from local
laws and treat Chinese people as inferior, second-class citizens. Although
this system is long gone, the fundamental mindset in the West's
relationship toward China that assumes the country to be inferior and
advocates a sense of entitlement to its markets and resources, remains,
and is manifest in the belief of American politicians that the country has
a right to effectively "steal" TikTok from Chinese ownership by attempting
to leverage its operation on the threat of a ban. There is a line of
thought present that only the US has the right to create globally
successful media apps, and that China has no entitlement to do so based on
a highly dubious political excuse.

However, the century of humiliation is over, and likewise any attempts to
impose that kind of coercion and subordination on China will almost
certainly fail. When former US president Donald Trump's administration in
2020 attempted to ban TikTok under the threat of a sale, an effort which
also failed, China's government responded by simply making it illegal for
ByteDance to engage in such a transaction. There is no reason to assume
that has changed, the same rule applies today. Under no circumstances will
the company be allowed to sell such a wildly successful product under the
threat of force to an American company. It is nothing less than effective
robbery and contravenes every way and principle a free market is expected
to operate.

If the US, therefore, goes ahead with a ban given there is no sale to be
had, it will invoke the anger of over 170 million Americans who use the app
and will be a politically self-defeating move for any figure who endorses
it. This in any case will demonstrate the paranoid, unreasonable and
unhinged culture which overhangs Capitol Hill on matters pertaining to
China. This is of course, assuming such a ban will survive the inevitable
legal challenge against it, which is also doubtful.

However, the message must be made clear. The US has no right to steal,
undermine or impede China's success. The hysteria over TikTok is
regurgitated paranoia based on a toxic mix of self-entitlement, McCarthyism
and reactionary jealousy, all of which are rooted in the inherent denial
of China's own development and success, the idea that all countries big or
small must be inferior to America. Competition of course is fine, but this
isn't competition, it's extortion.

The author is a British political and international relations analyst.
Pancho
2024-04-25 06:35:27 UTC
Permalink
Post by Smolley
On Tuesday, the US Senate passed a legislation that would ban popular
short video app TikTok, the most downloaded social media platform on the
planet, in the United States unless the app's Chinese owner ByteDance
sells it within a year.
How will they enforce a ban? If they can enforce a ban, will it not
encourage other countries to introduce similar bans?
Smolley
2024-04-26 07:03:50 UTC
Permalink
Post by Pancho
Post by Smolley
On Tuesday, the US Senate passed a legislation that would ban popular
short video app TikTok, the most downloaded social media platform on
the planet, in the United States unless the app's Chinese owner
ByteDance sells it within a year.
How will they enforce a ban? If they can enforce a ban, will it not
encourage other countries to introduce similar bans?
China has banned Facebook, Yahoo and Amazon for years.

Loading...