The Supreme Court just stepped into the TikTok firestorm. On Wednesday, it agreed to hear TikTok’s desperate appeal against a federal law that could ban the app unless its Chinese Communist Party (CCP)-linked owner, ByteDance, sells it to an American company.

The law, set to take effect January 19—one day before President-elect Donald Trump takes office—aims to cut off Beijing’s access to Americans’ data. But TikTok, predictably, claims it’s all a violation of “free speech.”

Here’s the real deal: ByteDance is legally required to share data with the CCP. As Annie Chestnut Tutor from the Heritage Foundation told me, TikTok isn’t just another app—it’s a Trojan horse for Beijing’s surveillance state.

Americans didn’t elect Trump to let a Chinese-controlled platform steal their private info. Now it’s up to the Supreme Court: Will they shut down TikTok’s CCP spy machine, or will Beijing’s favorite propaganda tool keep running?

 

The post Will the Supreme Court Finally Ban TikTok’s CCP Spy Machine? appeared first on The Lars Larson Show.