Trump Scored a HUGE Election Integrity Win Last Night
Marco Rubio Just Gave a Speech About the Rise of Left-Wing Violence...and This...
Wait, That's Who Is Going to Be on a Panel That Screens NY...
GOP Holding Firm in State Attorneys General Races
Is This Why Abigail Spanberger's Approval Ratings Are in the Toilet?
James Talarico's Smear Job on Ken Paxton Crashed and Burned When a Victim's...
How Speaker Mike Johnson Will Save the SAVE America Act
The Lure of Cheating the Government Without Penalty
Mamdani's Regime Is About to Destroy Small Businesses and His Cronies Are Bragging...
Private Equity Didn't Kill the Patient
Brightline Is a Boondoggle—Secretary Duffy Must Not Give It Another Bailout
When Friends Stand Together
Indian Americans Are Proud to Be Part of America’s 250-Year Story
Democrats Search for Graham Platner’s Runner-Up
Taxing the Wealthy Can’t Fund Social Security Into Solvency
Tipsheet
Premium

Why Rand Paul Says TikTok Ban Makes 'No Sense'

Why Rand Paul Says TikTok Ban Makes 'No Sense'
Greg Nash/Pool via AP

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) made the case as to why banning the Chinese-owned app, TikTok, makes “no sense” ahead of the House passing the legislation on Wednesday. 

In a 352-65 vote, the House passed a bill that could ban TikTok in the United States, which Republicans say poses a national security threat.

However, Paul argued that banning the Chinese-dominated app is a “draconian measure that stifles free expression, tramples constitutional rights, and disrupts the economic pursuits of millions of Americans.”

In a Twitter post, Paul claimed that banning TikTok would result in “ignoring its substantial investments in data security” and threaten the “American digital innovation.” 

He pointed out that lawmakers from both sides of the political aisle want to ban the app because it is owned by China, which Paul argued is not entirely true. 

Paul also pushed back on politicians who say they want to ban TikTok because its date cannot be secured due to its algorithm being in China. 

However, the Republican senator claims that the algorithm runs in the U.S. in Oracle Cloud with their review of the code.

Paul did acknowledge that the communist country “Does demand things,” but said that it hasn’t been proven that “Any information really is going from TikTok to any of these people in China.” 

If passed, TikTok, owned by ByteDance, will have 165 days from the day it is enacted to dismantle the app or face a ban on U.S. app stores and web hosting services.

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement