Here’s a short list for why Congress was so insistent on banishing TikTok from American soil: the national security risk of a Chinese company potentially accessing American data and Israel’s obvious losses on the PR front:
Incredible historical document here: Blinken says Israel’s PR is failing because social media allows people a direct look at what’s happening, shorn of the ability to mediate it, and it lands with emotional resonance. Romney then says yes, that’s why we moved to ban TikTok https://t.co/NeykVeZVRd
— Ryan Grim (@ryangrim) May 5, 2024

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Congress came up with an apparently foolproof solution to their problem. Banning a town hall like TikTok may pose some free speech issues but as long as we lean on the “We’re doing this for National Security” angle and thumb the scale at the Supreme Court, there’s not much the American people can do. Right?
Unfortunately, they’ve forgotten two words that go at the very heart of what it means to be an American: “Fuck You.” Spite is a big mover when it comes to explaining what makes us tick — just think about how we vote. Even if the data we share by using apps could pose a legitimate national security risk, people are very okay with China having their data if it means sticking it to the man. Enter Xiaohongshu, or Little Red Book.
xiaohongshu at the top of app downloads today, *and* "tiktok refugees" are already finding a home among the chinese luigi mangione stans. they're joking about sending their data directly to xi jinping in a red envelope. you know the american tech lobby is pissed right now lol pic.twitter.com/eTWMqelcAn
— morgan sung (@morgan_sung) January 13, 2025

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The app borrows its name from Chairman Mao’s Little Red Book, an accurate description of a bunch of aphorisms and speeches meant to disseminate Communist Party talking points. Just to be clear, I’m not saying that in the way Fox News does — that’s what it actually was and was meant to do. You’d be hard pressed to think of a more poetic platform for Americans to flock to in the face of government censorship. And as far as free speech goes? Looks like you won’t be censored for talking about climate change worsened wildfires or ongoing genocide:
https://twitter.com/chuuyeoseul/status/1879093971403907347
Folks are going to straight up learn Mandarin out of spite and lulz:
incredible things happening on xiaohongshu pic.twitter.com/o9pGqKRBzd
— 👩🦰 (@susanbutworse) January 14, 2025
For what it is worth, Congress was right about one thing. The Chinese “spies” do seem very interested in American data. It’s just that the data in question are pictures of the user’s cats:
this is the joke everyone is spamming to Americans on Xiaohongshu pic.twitter.com/K9oFajMg6f
— Misha (@SteierMisha) January 13, 2025
Trend on red note: Americans pay a “cat tax” by showing photos of the pet, which is then inspected by Chinese users who then allow entry pic.twitter.com/VGTkTGX7AK
— Mohamed🇺🇸🇸🇴 (@2890Moshark2) January 13, 2025
And who knows what cascading effects will come from seeing more of what life is like in China. Will the constant threats from Fox News that the woke left is trying to turn America into Communist China hit the same after the public has fled to what is effectively some of the best propaganda possible?
Brother do you know what XHS is? In China it is known broadly as the rich kid Instagram app https://t.co/kqtCatx4Ti
— punished giorgio (@GMomurder) January 14, 2025
Can you imagine the whiplash from reading about congestion prices in New York and America’s poor public transit woes to seeing how advanced commutes can be?
There seems to be a large uptick of N Americans going to Xiaohongshu and getting massive culture shock. Will seeing China's public transport content on Xiaohongshu (examples below) change their minds on what is possible with urban public transit and… pic.twitter.com/jvu5rOg7Fk
— JR Urbane Network (@JRUrbaneNetwork) January 14, 2025
Gotta love perverse incentives. There’s been talk of Elon Musk pulling a King Twit and buying TikTok for something in the $50B range, but TikTok has shut that down as “pure fiction.” What options are left for Congress? Block every international app that promises to be the new TikTok? What are we, China? Damn, we can’t use that expression anymore — our public transit doesn’t even hold a candle to theirs.
Earlier: TikTok Plans To Fight Censorship, Mouthy Politicians Make It Very Easy For Them
Chris Williams became a social media manager and assistant editor for Above the Law in June 2021. Prior to joining the staff, he moonlighted as a minor Memelord™ in the Facebook group Law School Memes for Edgy T14s. He endured Missouri long enough to graduate from Washington University in St. Louis School of Law. He is a former boatbuilder who cannot swim, a published author on critical race theory, philosophy, and humor, and has a love for cycling that occasionally annoys his peers. You can reach him by email at [email protected] and by tweet at @WritesForRent.