After a bill in US Congress was overwhelmingly passed to ban the social media app TikTok, social media users outraged online and linked the move to pro-Israel groups trying to curb the surge of pro-Palestinian content on the platform.
The Wall Street Journal also reported last week that there was “new momentum in part because of anger over TikTok videos about the Israel-Hamas conflict”.
In another report by the WSJ, Democrat Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi said it was the war in Gaza that led him to support a ban on TikTok. Krishnamoorthi said “Oct 7 really opened people’s eyes to what’s happening on TikTok”.
Republican Senator Josh Hawley sent a letter to the Biden administration in November calling for the ban of TikTok. In the letter, he specifically cited the “ubiquity of anti-Israel content on TikTok” as one of his main reasons for advocating for the ban.
Others pointed to the idea that the goal of pro-Israel groups is not to ban the social media giant, but for a pro-Israel entity to purchase the application.Last week, former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said he is putting together a group of investors to try and buy TikTok.
“They are not trying to ban #TikTok. They are trying to use government power to force TikTok to be taken over by pro-Israel ownership to silence criticism of #Genocide and #apartheid,” said Craig Mokhiber, the former director of the New York Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Linkerbaan, where are you from?
Netherlands
They could be from South Africa or may be some weirdo who likes how the Dutch language sounds