China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US has got to realize TikTok not a problem

- — ZHANG ZHOUXIANG, CHINA DAILY

“It’s highly addictive and destructiv­e and we’re seeing troubling data about the corrosive impact of constant social media use, particular­ly on young men and women here in America.” This is what Mike Gallagher, a Republican Congressma­n from Wisconsin, said about TikTok on the first day of 2023. He also described the smartphone app with at least 100 million users in the United States as “digital fentanyl”.

Why does Gallagher hate TikTok so much? It is right for a Congressma­n to see a problem in so many people viewing video clips at the tap of a smartphone screen when there are myriad other problems plaguing the US. By the end of 2020, 44 percent of students in the US have used marijuana, which is legal for recreation­al purposes in over 20 states. There were 42,700 deaths caused by fentanyl overdoses in 2020 alone. TikTok, or “digital fentanyl” as Gallagher calls it, at least doesn’t kill people.

There is no dearth of addictive things in the US, be it Hollywood, or YouTube or Twitter. So many people pick up their phones and browse various apps first thing in the morning.

Gallagher, of course, does not see a problem there. It is only TikTok he is worried about.

The reason Gallagher finds TikTok “destructiv­e”, as anybody would have guessed, is the fact that TikTok is affiliated to Chinese company ByteDance. It matters little to him that some people even make money by sharing videos and attracting followers on the app.

For some time now, it is politicall­y correct in the US to blame China for anything and everything and take harsh measures against Chinese companies such as Huawei, ZTE, and TikTok.

Maybe the authoritie­s in the US need to be reminded that TikTok is totally run by US teams, and by demonizing TikTok they are stopping their own residents from making something creative and their own people from enjoying life.

They would actually do better to spare TikTok and attend to some bigger problems.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States