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Latino voters are coveted by both major parties. They also are a target for election misinformation

Kids play outside a polling precinct on March 19, in Guadalupe, Ariz. (Photo: AP/Ty ONeil)

As ranchera music filled the Phoenix recording studio at Radio Campesina, a station personality spoke in Spanish into the microphone.

“Friends of Campesina, in these elections, truth and unity are more important than ever,” said morning show host Tony Arias. “Don’t let yourself be trapped by disinformation.”

The audio was recorded as a promo for Radio Campesina’s new campaign aiming to empower Latino voters ahead of the 2024 elections. That effort includes discussing election-related misinformation narratives and fact-checking conspiracy theories on air.

“We are at the front lines of fighting misinformation in our communities,” said María Barquín, program director of Chavez Radio Group, the nonprofit that runs Radio Campesina, a network of Spanish-language stations in Arizona, California and Nevada. “There’s a lot at stake in 2024 for our communities. And so we need to amp up these efforts now more than ever.”

Latinos have grown at the second-fastest rate, behind Asian Americans, of any major racial and ethnic group in the U.S. since the last presidential election, according to a Pew Research Center analysis, and are projected to account for 14.7%, or 36.2 million, of all eligible voters in November, a new high. They are a growing share of the electorate in several presidential and congressional battleground states, including Arizona, California and Nevada, and are being heavily courted by Republicans and Democrats.

Democratic President Joe Biden has credited Latino voters as a key reason he defeated Republican Donald Trump in 2020 and is urging them to help him do it again in November. Given the high stakes of a presidential election year, experts expect a surge of misinformation, especially through audio and video, targeting Spanish-speaking voters.

“Latinos have immense voting power and can make a decisive difference in elections, yet they are an under-messaged, under-prioritized audience,” said Arturo Vargas, CEO of NALEO Educational Fund, a national nonprofit encouraging Latino civic participation. “Our vote has an impact. These bad actors know this, and one way to influence the Latino vote is to misinform.”

In addition to radio, much of the news and information Latinos consume is audio-based through podcasts or on social media platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp and YouTube. Content moderation efforts in Spanish are limited on these platforms, which are seeing a rising number of right-wing influencers peddling election falsehoods and QAnon conspiracy theories.

The types of misinformation overlap with falsehoods readily found in other conservative media and many corners of the internet — conspiracy theories about mail voting, dead people casting ballots, rigged voting machines and threats at polling sites.

Other narratives are more closely tailored to Latino communities, including false information about immigration, inflation and abortion rights, often exploiting the traumas and fears of specific communities. For example, Spanish speakers who have immigrated from countries with recent histories of authoritarianism, socialism, high inflation and election fraud may be more vulnerable to misinformation about those topics.

Misinformation on the airwaves also is particularly difficult to track and combat compared with more traditional, text-based misinformation, said Daiquiri Ryan Mercado, strategic legal adviser and policy counsel for the National Hispanic Media Coalition, which runs the Spanish Language Disinformation Coalition. While misinformation researchers can more easily code programs to categorize and track text-based misinformation, audio often requires manual listening. Radio stations that air only in certain areas at certain times also can be difficult to track.

“When we have such limited representation, Spanish speakers feel like they can connect to these people, and they become trusted messengers,” Mercado said. “But some people may take advantage of that trust.”

Mercado and others said that’s why trusted messengers, such as Radio Campesina, are so important. The station was founded by Mexican American labor and civil rights leader César Chavez and has built a loyal listening base over decades. At any given moment, as many as 750,000 people are listening to the Chavez Radio Network on the air and online, Barquín said.

“They will come and listen to us because of the music, but our main focus is to empower and educate through information,” she said. “The music is just a tactic to bring them in.”

Radio Campesina’s on-air talent and musical guests often discuss misinformation on air, answering listeners’ questions about voting, teaching them about spotting misinformation and doing tutorials on election processes such as how to submit mail-in ballots. The station also has hosted rodeos and music events to register new voters and talk about misinformation.

They allow listeners to call or text questions on WhatsApp, a social media platform especially popular with immigrant communities but where much of the misinformation they see festers. In March, the station partnered with Mi Familia Vota, a Latino advocacy group, for an on-air show and voter phone bank event to answer voter questions.

“We know that there are many people who are unmotivated because sometimes we come from countries where, when it comes to elections, we don’t trust the vote,” said Carolina Rodriguez-Greer, Arizona director of Mi Familia Vota, before she shared information on the show about how voters can track their ballots.

The organization began working with Spanish media outlets to dispel misinformation after seeing candidates such as former Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake spread election lies in 2022, Rodriguez-Greer said. Lake is now running for the U.S. Senate with Trump’s endorsement.

“One way to combat this misinformation is to fill the airways with good information,” said Angelica Razo, national deputy director of campaigns and programs for Mi Familia Vota.

In Tempe, Brian Garcia tunes into Radio Campesina on drives to work. When he was growing up, the station played as his dad cooked dinner and his family gathered around the table. It was a staple for his family, he said, and he’s excited about its efforts to tackle election misinformation.

“There aren’t many organizations or folks that go onto Spanish language media to combat misinformation and disinformation,” he said. “And I think serving as a resource and a trusted source within the Latino community that has already built those relationships, that trust will go a long way.”

A variety of other community and media groups also are prioritizing the seemingly never-ending fight against misinformation.

Maritza Félix often fact-checked misinformation for her mother, whom she calls the “Queen of WhatsApp.” This led to Félix doing the same for family and friends in a WhatsApp group that grew into the Spanish news nonprofit Conecta Arizona.

It now runs a radio show and newsletter that debunks false claims about election processes, health, immigration and border politics. Conecta Arizona also combats misinformation about the upcoming Mexican presidential election that Félix said has been seeping over the border.

Jeronimo Cortina, associate professor of political science at the University of Houston, tracks broad misinformation narratives aimed at Spanish-speaking communities across the country but also localized content targeting the state’s rapidly growing Latino electorate. That includes misinformation about candidates’ clean energy policies taking away jobs in Texas’ oil and gas industries and about migrants flooding over the border.

“You won’t see the same content targeting Latinos in Texas compared to Latinos in Iowa,” he said.

This has led to a wider universe of groups tackling misinformation aimed at Latinos. NALEO Educational Fund’s Defiende La Verdad campaign monitors misinformation and and trains community leaders to spot it. In Florida, the We Are Más podcast combats Spanish-language misinformation nationally and locally, said its founder Evelyn Pérez-Verdía. Jolt Action, a Texas Latino advocacy group, registers new voters and helps them make sense of misinformation.

The Spanish-language fact-checking group Factchequeado is building partnerships with dozens of media outlets across the country to provide training and free Spanish fact-checking content.

“Disinformation is at the same time a global phenomenon and a hyperlocal phenomenon,” said Factchequeado co-founder Laura Zommer. “So we have to address it with local and national groups uniting together.”

Premier australiano dice que el país enfrenta una «crisis nacional» de violencia intrafamiliar

En esta imagen tomada de un video proporcionado por la cadena ABC, una multitud marcha y grita consignas en contra de la violencia de género, el domingo 28 de abril de 2024, en Melbourne, Australia. (Photo: AP)

CANBERRA, Australia.— El primer ministro australiano Anthony Albanese se refirió el lunes a la violencia intrafamiliar como una “crisis nacional” después de que miles de personas protestaron en diversos puntos del país por la violencia contra las mujeres.

Miles de personas se manifestaron el domingo en ciudades de Australia para atraer atención a los fallecimientos de 27 mujeres en lo que va del año, presuntamente por actos de violencia de género en una población de 27 millones.

Albanese dijo que las manifestaciones eran un llamado a todos los niveles del gobierno australiano para que se haga más con el fin de prevenir la violencia de género.

“Es evidente que necesitamos hacer más. No es suficiente con sólo tener empatía”, declaró Albanese a la televisora Nine Network. “El hecho de que… una mujer muera a manos de su pareja cada cuatro días en promedio es simplemente una crisis nacional”.

El fin de semana hubo 17 manifestaciones en diversos lugares de Australia. En la ciudad de Melbourne marcharon unas 15.000 personas.

Albanese dijo que el miércoles llevará a cabo una reunión con gobernadores de estados y territorios australianos para hablar sobre una respuesta coordinada al problema.

Albanese, su ministra de la Mujer Katy Gallagher, y su ministra de Servicios Sociales, Amanda Rishworth, recibieron una respuesta hostil cuando asistieron a un mitin el domingo en Canberra, la capital.

Algunos manifestantes les gritaron a los funcionarios gubernamentales: “queremos acción” y “hagan su trabajo”.

Albanese dijo que era necesario enfocarse más en los perpetradores y en la prevención de la violencia.

“Necesitamos cambiar la cultura, necesitamos cambiar actitudes… necesitamos cambiar el sistema jurídico”, dijo.

Former Jets offensive tackle Mekhi Becton agrees to 1-year deal with Eagles, agent says

eagles
Louisville offensive lineman Mekhi Becton runs a drill at the NFL football scouting combine in Indianapolis, Feb. 28, 2020. Becton has agreed to terms with the Philadelphia Eagles on a one-year contract worth up to $5.5 million, two people familiar with the deal told The Associated Press on Sunday, April 28, 2024. (Photo: AP/Michael Conroy/ File)

Former New York Jets offensive tackle Mekhi Becton has agreed to terms with the Philadelphia Eagles on a one-year contract worth up to $5.5 million, agent Alan Herman told The Associated Press on Sunday night.

The contract is pending a physical, according to Herman.

ESPN first reported that Becton plans to join the Eagles, who needed some depth on their offensive line behind left tackle Jordan Mailata and right tackle Lane Johnson after backup Jack Driscoll signed with Miami as a free agent last month and Philadelphia didn’t draft any tackles over the weekend.

Becton was the 11th overall pick in the 2020 draft by the Jets out of Louisville and was expected to be a long-term anchor of New York’s offensive line. Knee injuries hampered his development after a solid rookie season.

The 6-foot-7 Becton started 16 games last season for the Jets, but New York didn’t pick up the fifth-year option on his rookie deal and allowed him to become a free agent.

The Jets revamped their offensive line this offseason, signing veteran Tyron Smith to a one-year deal worth up to $20 million to be their left tackle and trading for Morgan Moses to play on the right side. They also drafted Penn State left tackle Olu Fashanu with the No. 11 pick – the same spot at which Becton was taken – last Thursday night.

Becton injured his right knee in the 2021 regular-season opener against Carolina and needed arthroscopic surgery – and he didn’t play in another game that year. He came back for training camp the following summer and was set to play right tackle, but injured the same knee during practice and needed major surgery.

After weighing at least 400 pounds at one point, Becton lost weight during his rehabilitation and was down to a svelte 350 — the lightest he has been since his college days at Louisville – during training camp last summer. He was set to play right tackle, but moved back to the left side when Duane Brown was injured early in the season.

Becton will now work closely with Eagles offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland, who has overseen one of the NFL’s best O-lines over the past several years.

Minority and majority rights

April 23: Protest at North Penn demands answers over student attack. (Photo: Impacto staff)

The recent violent incident at Pennbrook Middle School in the North Penn School District continues to generate shock, controversy, and much anger among students, parents, and even district employees themselves.

Firstly, the North Penn School District’s evident mishandling of the case of the aggressive student has intensified the anger of parents and former classmates who had already been victims of his outbursts and bullying.

Secondly, once he carried out his threats by brutally attacking another student, in their first communication sent to parents, the school administration presented the incident as an altercation between students, when it was later clearly revealed that it was an assault by a male teenager, possibly with gender dysphoria (as he identifies as a woman and has a long and violent history) against a seventh-grade student.

The attack left the victim, seemingly chosen at random, with significant injuries. Seventh-graders returned home in shock, deeply worried about returning to school. Several students haven’t returned yet.

While the perpetrator’s biological or perceived gender is irrelevant, their antisocial and aggressive behavior is not. It’s possible that their identity played a role in the heinous attack.

In the pursuit of promoting the freedoms and rights of the LGBTQ+ community, there’s a tendency to avoid a crucial issue: the empowerment of transgender youth can sometimes go awry. In many instances, schools fear imposing the same disciplinary standards on transgender students as on others when they break the rules.

It’s true that bullying can occur within the LGBTQ+ community, but that doesn’t mean they should be exempt from discipline or fair treatment in an attempt to compensate for the mistreatment they may have experienced from other students. These other students also need to be held accountable for their actions.

It’s important to remember that this minority is not the only one facing discrimination or a lack of sensitivity in schools. Students from racialized communities, those with learning or developmental disabilities, those with emotional disorders, and even documented and undocumented immigrants are also part of minority groups susceptible to bullying.

However, this doesn’t exempt students from following the established rules. These rules exist for a crucial reason: to create a safe and supportive learning environment that fosters academic achievement and emotional intelligence development. Promoting healthy social interaction is a fundamental objective of education during the school years.

This has led to some transgender adolescents, like the one in this case, who suffer from severe personality problems and aggressive behavior, not being treated with the same standards. Disciplinary measures are not applied when necessary for fear of backlash from parents, the press, and social media or a legal accusation of discriminatory behavior.

While it is crucial to safeguard the progress made in upholding the rights of LGBTQ+ minorities and related groups – and establishing certain special protections against discriminatory behavior is warranted – we must not, in our fear of being politically incorrect, grant them undue power, lest we paradoxically fall into a culture of discrimination and punishment towards the «binary» majority. This scenario appears to have unfolded at Pennbrook Middle School, where multiple testimonies indicate that warnings about the student’s threats had been issued.

Numerous accounts from students, not only from Pennbrook, have reached parents, highlighting instances where certain members of the LGBTQ+ community enjoy privileges in classrooms and common areas. They observe how teachers often turn a blind eye to their severe misbehavior.

Fearing retaliation, one student from the school, who wishes to remain anonymous, shared that «the teachers themselves are afraid of them; they allow themselves to be verbally abused and don’t react, so they do whatever they want.» Other classmates during this conversation confirmed this, expressing their insecurity and frustration over this «injustice.»

The school district has announced an external investigation to delve into this apparent case of systemic negligence. However, we must question the nature of this investigation in a culture increasingly fearful of challenging common sense, where individuals are gravitating towards extremes, and amidst a climate of ideological and political polarization.

In light of this distressing incident, it is imperative to deeply reflect on the direction we want to give the education of our children. We must question how to provide genuine guidance and support to all children, regardless of whether or not they have mental health issues or whether they belong to minorities or majorities.

It is essential to transform schools into safe and reliable environments where all minors, who in one way or another have been affected by the prolonged period of the pandemic and the current rise in violence, can learn and develop fully.

As educators, we can’t forget that setting boundaries shows we care. It’s how kids build healthy and confident personalities.

As journalists, we should not succumb to self-censorship and have a duty to name facts accurately without fear of being accused of transphobia simply for pointing out that the attacker is transgender. This does not imply blaming the entire transgender community, as many of its members have publicly condemned the actions of this teenager.

Labeling an entire community because of one person’s actions is unfair. But in this case, hiding who the attacker is seems like they’re trying to avoid the truth. All signs point to the attacker’s identity playing a big part in why the school didn’t stop the attack sooner. This has left the students, especially those who saw it happen and weren’t listened to, feeling really hurt.

If the North Penn School District in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, was trying to avoid a discrimination lawsuit against the student who is now in custody, they will now likely have to defend themselves against multiple lawsuits for failing to prevent what was communicated as a credible threat.

Nuevos cargos contra jóvenes acusados por tiroteo durante feriado musulmán en Filadelfia

 Las autoridades anunciaron nuevos cargos contra cuatro jóvenes arrestados tras un tiroteo entre grupos rivales que dejó tres heridos en una celebración del fin del ayuno musulmán de Ramadán en Filadelfia.

Los jóvenes de 15 y 16 años arrestados tras el suceso el 10 de abril en la Plaza Clara Muhammad serán procesados como adultos bajo cargos de asalto con agravantes, conspiración, asalto simple y actitud irresponsable, además de los cargos de tenencia de armas que se les habían imputado antes, informaron autoridades el viernes.

Un hombre de 21 años también enfrenta cargos de tenencia de armas.

Las armas confiscadas a los acusados, según fiscales, se ajustan a solo 13 de los 33 cartuchos hallados en el lugar. Las autoridades pidieron a cualquier otra persona involucrada en el hecho entregarse a las autoridades, o de lo contrario serán arrestadas.

El festejo Eid al-Fitr, realizado cada año en el vecindario Parkside de Filadelfia, terminó abruptamente a eso de las 2:30 de la tarde cuando estallaron unos 30 disparos, dijo la policía. Un joven de 15 años fue herido en la pierna y el hombro al ser baleado por la policía, un hombre fue herido y un joven fue herido en una mano.

Las autoridades dicen que unas 1.000 personas, entre ellas muchas familias, asistían al evento. Testigos narraron cómo corrieron hacia carpas montadas cerca del parque, se escondieron detrás de árboles o se echaron al suelopara proteger a los niños.

Eid al-Fitr es un feriado musulmán que marca el fin del ayuno de Ramadán.

A look at the protests about the war in Gaza that have emerged on US college campuses

protests
Pro-Palestinian demonstration encampment is seen at the Columbia University, Friday, April 26, 2024, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Student protests over the Israel-Hamas war have popped up on an increasing number of college campuses following last week’s arrest of more than 100 demonstrators at Columbia University.

The students are calling for universities to separate themselves from any companies that are advancing Israel’s military efforts in Gaza — and in some cases from Israel itself.

Protests on many campuses have been orchestrated by coalitions of student groups. The groups largely act independently, though students say they’re inspired by peers at other universities.

A student protester stands in front of the statue of John Harvard, the first major benefactor of Harvard College, draped in the Palestinian flag, at an encampment of students protesting against the war in Gaza, at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., on Thursday, April 25, 2024. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

A look at protests on campuses in recent days:

COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

Pro-Palestinian student protesters set up a tent encampment at the Ivy League university in New York last week. Police first tried to clear the encampment on April 18, when they arrested more than 100 protesters. But the move backfired, inspiring students across the country and motivating protesters at Columbia to regroup.

Qais Dana stands by the statue of Ben Franklin during a pro-Palestinian protest on College Green in the heart of the University of Pennsylvania campus in the in Philadelphia on Thursday, April 25, 2024. (Elizabeth Robertson/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

Earlier this week, the Ivy League school, where Monday is set to be the last day of classes, switched to hybrid learning. Commencement is set for May 15.

Students said Friday afternoon that they had reached an impasse with administrators and intended to continue their encampment until their demands are met. Columbia officials had earlier said that negotiations were showing progress. Despite dozens of journalists on campus and scores of police officers outside the gates, an unassuming spring day unfolded Friday with students sitting on the library’s steps or grabbing a quick bite while soon-to-be-graduates posed for photos in their powder-blue gowns.

Columbia’s president, Minouche Shafik, faced a significant, but largely symbolic, rebuke from faculty Friday but retains the support of trustees, who have the power to hire or fire the president. A report by the university senate’s executive committee, which represents faculty, found Shafik and her administration took “many actions and decisions that have harmed Columbia University,» including calling in police. Following the report, the senate passed a resolution that included a task force to monitor how the administration would make changes going forward.

Hundreds of counterprotesters gathered on the streets outside Columbia on Friday morning, many holding Israeli flags and chanting for the hostages being held by Hamas and other militants to be released.

The university said in a statement Saturday night that students and administrators had engaged in negotiations.

“Dialogue between university officials and student organizers is ongoing. We want to be clear: There is no truth to claims of an impending lockdown or evictions on campus,” the Columbia administration’s statement said.

NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY

Police in riot gear cleared an encampment on the campus of Northeastern University on Saturday. Massachusetts State Police said about 102 protesters were arrested and will be charged with trespassing and disorderly conduct. Protesters said they were given about 15 minutes to disperse before being arrested.

As workers pulled down tents and bagged up the debris from the encampment, several dozen people across from the encampment chanted, “Let the Kids Go,” and slogans against the war in Gaza. They also booed as police cars passed and taunted the officers who stood guard.

Northeastern said in a statement that the demonstration, which began two days ago, had become “infiltrated by professional organizers” with no affiliation to the university and antisemitic slurs, including “kill the Jews,” had been used.

“We cannot tolerate this kind of hate on our campus,” the statement posted on social media said.

The Huskies for a Free Palestine student group disputed the university’s account, saying in a statement that counterprotesters were to blame for the slurs and no student protesters “repeated the disgusting hate speech.”

Students at the protest said a counterprotester attempted to instigate hate speech but insisted their event was peaceful and, like many across the country, was aimed at drawing attention to what they described as the “genocide” in Gaza and their university’s complicity in the war.

Israel supporters show up at George Washington University where students protest, during a pro-Palestinian protest over the Israel-Hamas war, Friday, April 26, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

About 100 people were detained and students who produced a valid ID were released. They will face “disciplinary action» but not legal action, while people who refused to disclose their affiliation were arrested, the university said.

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

The University of Southern California said on Saturday it had temporarily closed its University Park Campus to nonresidents, without providing details of the closure or possible enforcement measures.

Joel Curran, senior vice president of communications, said in a statement that USC property was vandalized by members of a group “that has continued to illegally camp on our campus,” as well as disrupting operations and harrassing students and others.

Students declined numerous attempts by university President Carol Folt to meet, and the administration hopes for “a more reasonable response Sunday before we are forced to take further action,” Curran said.

“While the university fully supports freedom of expression, these acts of vandalism and harassment are absolutely unacceptable and will not be tolerated,” Curran said.

The university canceled its main stage graduation ceremony set for May 10 after its campus was roiled by protests. The university already canceled a commencement speech by the school’s pro-Palestinian valedictorian, citing safety concerns.

The Los Angeles Police Department said more than 90 people were arrested Wednesday night on charges of trespassing during a protest at the university. One person was arrested on a charge of assault with a deadly weapon. There were no reports of injuries.

The university said Wednesday that it had closed campus and police would arrest people who did not leave.

In her first public statement in nearly two weeks, President Carol Folt in a statement late Friday — the last day of classes — condemned the protests while imploring the campus community to find common ground and ways to support each other.

THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY

Police clashed with protesters at Ohio State University in Columbus, just hours after they gathered Thursday evening. Those who refused to leave after warnings were arrested and charged with criminal trespass, said university spokesperson Benjamin Johnson, citing rules barring overnight events. Of 36 people arrested, Johnson said Friday that 16 were students and 20 were not affiliated with the university. The school’s commencement is set for May 5.

GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY

About 50 students at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., set up a tent encampment on the school’s University Yard on Thursday. Later in the day, a group of Georgetown University students and professors staged their own protest walkout and marched to the George Washington campus to join them. The protesters are demanding that the university divest from Israel and lift a suspension against a prominent pro-Palestinian student group.

The university’s last day of classes before final exams is set for Monday and commencement is scheduled for May 19. Because of the noise generated by the protests, the university said it would move law school finals to another building from the one where they had originally been scheduled.

The university said the protesters must remove tents and disperse by 7 p.m.

CALIFORNIA STATE POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY, HUMBOLDT

University officials extended the closure of the campus until May 10 — the end of the semester — saying instruction would continue to be remote, after protesters at the university in northern California used furniture, tents, chains and zip ties to block entrances to an academic and administrative building on Monday. Commencement is scheduled for May 11.

Officials said in a statement Tuesday that students had occupied a second building and three students had been arrested. On Wednesday, officials said some unidentified people who were not students were also inside one of the occupied buildings. On Thursday, the university said protesters continued to occupy the two buildings.

A dean at the school, Jeff Crane, suggested during the meeting that the university form a committee that would include students to do a deep dive into the school’s investments. Crane also suggested faculty and students continue meeting every 24 hours to keep an open line of communication. The sides have yet to announce an agreement.

The school’s senate of faculty and staff demanded the university’s president resign in a no-confidence vote Thursday, citing the decision to call police in to remove the barricaded students Monday.

On Friday, the university released a statement responding to questions from those occupying the buildings. The statement said there will be consequences for actions that violate policy or law, but officials would take into account actions by any students who choose to evacuate the occupied buildings and support efforts to clear them. It did not say the charges faced by those arrested would be dropped.

The administration also offered protesters a 5 p.m. deadline to leave and “not be immediately arrested.” But that deadline passed and local media reported that protesters remained on campus Saturday morning.

Officials on Saturday afternoon said a “hard closure” would be enforced going forward. “Individuals are prohibited from entering or being on campus without permission,” the university said in a statement.

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY

An encampment set up by students at NYU swelled to hundreds of protesters earlier this week. Police on Wednesday said that 133 protesters had been taken into custody. They said all were released with summonses to appear in court on disorderly conduct charges. Commencement is set for May 15.

EMORY UNIVERSITY

At Emory University in Atlanta, where Atlanta police and Georgia state troopers had dismantled a camp on the school’s quadrangle, the school president on Friday said in an email that some of the videos of a clash between police and people on the campus “are shocking” and that he is “horrified that members of our community had to experience and witness such interactions.”

School officials said 20 of the 28 people arrested were “Emory community members.»

Video circulated widely on social media shows two women who identified themselves as professors being detained, with one of them slammed to the ground by one officer as a second officer then pushes her chest and face onto a concrete sidewalk. In a separate incident Thursday evening, some protesters pinned police officers against the glass doors of the Candler School of Theology on the campus and threw objects at the officers, Emory’s president said.

NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY

Northwestern University changed its student code of conduct Thursday morning to bar tents on its suburban Chicago campus as student activists set up an encampment.

University President Michael Schill issued an email saying the university had enacted an “interim addendum” to its student code to bar tents, among other things, and warned of disciplinary actions including suspension, expulsion and criminal charges.

“The goal of this addendum is to balance the right to peacefully demonstrate with our goal to protect our community, to avoid disruptions to instruction and to ensure university operations can continue unabated,” Schilling said.

The university’s commencement is scheduled for June 9.

FASHION INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY

A few dozen protesters set up tents and occupied a building Thursday at the Fashion Institute of Technology, part of the public State University of New York system. Protesters sat on the floor or milled around, many wearing face masks and kaffiyehs. Other protesters outside the building held signs and Palestinian flags. They refused to speak to a reporter. Around a dozen protesters spent the night in tents and sleeping bags inside a campus building. The institute’s museum, which is located in the building where the demonstrators set up camp, was closed Friday.

The school’s commencement was still scheduled for May 22 and May 23.

INDIANA UNIVERSITY BLOOMINGTON

After an encampment was set up at Indiana University Bloomington, police with shields and batons shoved into a line of protesters linked arm-in-arm Thursday afternoon. Videos posted to social media appear to show the protest continuing after law enforcement stopped making arrests.

In an update Friday, the university police said 34 people were arrested. Public information officer Hannah Skibba said charges include trespassing, resisting law enforcement and battery on a public safety official. One officer sustained “minor injuries.» Protests continued Friday, one day before the last day of classes. The university’s commencement is scheduled for May 4.

Jeffrey Kehr, chief deputy prosecutor for Monroe County, said in an email that those arrested were released on their own recognizance and the office will “examine all the reports we receive and any relevant footage to determine what, if any, charges are appropriate.”

UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA

The University of Pennsylvania interim President J. Larry Jameson called late Friday for an encampment of protesters on the west Philadelphia campus to be disbanded, saying it violated the university’s facilities policies.

The “harassing and intimidating comments and actions” by some protesters violate the school’s open expression guidelines as well as state and federal law, Jameson said, and vandalism of a statue with antisemitic graffiti was “especially reprehensible and will be investigated as a hate crime.”

“I am deeply saddened and troubled that our many efforts to respectfully engage in discourse, support open expression, and create a community that is free of hate and inclusive for everyone have been ignored by those who choose to disrupt and intimidate,” he said.

Failure to disband the encampment immediately and to adhere to Penn’s policies will result in sanctions consistent with our due process procedures as they apply to students, faculty, and staff, Jameson said.

The university’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors responded by urging the administration not to “escalate the situation” or “violate the rights of students and faculty.”

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA

In Gainesville, Florida, home to the University of Florida, protesters were warned Friday that students could face suspension and banishment for three years, and employees could be fired, if they violated rules including camping, using bullhorns, protesting inside buildings or possessing weapons. Around 50 people have been protesting on campus since Wednesday.

Earlier this year, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis directed the state’s universities to make it easier for out-of-state students facing antisemitism and other religious harassment in the wake of the Israel-Hamas war to transfer to Florida campuses.

The Republican governor’s administration last fall also ordered state universities to ban a pro-Palestinian student organization, Students for Justice in Palestine, from campuses, saying it illegally backs Hamas militants who attacked Israel. The group has challenged that decision in federal court.

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY

Arizona State University said 69 people were arrested early Saturday on suspicion of criminal trespassing for setting up an unauthorized encampment on a lawn on its Tempe campus. The protesters were given chances to leave and those who refused were arrested.

“While the university will continue to be an environment that embraces freedom of speech, ASU’s first priority is to create a safe and secure environment that supports teaching and learning,” the university said in a statement.

Protesters pitched tents, including some that police dismantled, and at least three people were arrested Friday. A television news report put the number of protesters in the dozens and video showed people waving flags and holding signs reading “Free Palestine.»

University and Tempe city police representatives did not immediately answer emails asking about arrests, injuries or the size of the crowd.

A university spokesperson, Elena Bras, issued a statement that said “unapproved encampments” were prohibited on campus, and failure to comply would be grounds for arrest for trespassing.

Police officer hiring in US increases in 2023 after years of decline, survey shows

police
Police tape cordons off the scene of a crime in Levittown, Pa., Saturday, March 16, 2024. Police departments reported a year-over-year increase in sworn officers in 2023 for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began and since the 2020 police killing of George Floyd spurred nationwide protests and increased scrutiny of police, according to a survey released by the Police Executive Research Forum. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

PHILADELPHIA— Police departments across the United States are reporting an increase in their ranks for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 killing of George Floyd, which led to a historic exodus of officers, a survey shows.

More sworn officers were hired in 2023 than in any one of the previous four years, and fewer officers overall resigned or retired, according to the 214 law enforcement agencies that responded to a survey by the Police Executive Research Forum, or PERF.

Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers spurred nationwide protests against police brutality and heightened scrutiny of law enforcement.

As more and more officers left, many of the departments had to redeploy stretched resources by shifting officers away from investigative work or quality of life issues such as abandoned vehicles or noise violations to handle increases in crime and, in some cases, the shortages meant slower response times or limiting responses to emergencies only, police officials say.

“I just think that the past four years have been particularly challenging for American policing,» said Chuck Wexler, executive director of PERF, a nonprofit policing think tank based in Washington, D.C. «And our survey shows we’re finally starting to turn a corner.”

Individual departments are turning that corner at different rates, however, according to Wexler, who noted many are still struggling to attract and keep officers.

As a whole, the profession “isn’t out of the woods yet,” he said.

The Associated Press left phone and email messages with several unions and police departments to ask about increased hiring.

The survey shows that while small and medium departments had more sworn officers than they did in January 2020, large departments are still more than 5% below their staffing levels from that time, even with a year-over-year increase from 2022 to 2023.

The survey also showed smaller departments with fewer than 50 officers are still struggling with a higher rate of resignations and retirements.

The survey asked only for numbers, Wexler said, so it’s hard to say whether those officers are leaving for larger departments or leaving the profession altogether. He also said smaller departments, which account for 80% of agencies nationwide, were underrepresented in the responses PERF received.

Many larger departments have increased officer pay or started offering incentives such as signing bonuses for experienced officers who are willing to transfer, something smaller departments can’t really compete with. At least a dozen smaller departments have disbanded, leaving the municipalities they once served to rely on state or county help for policing.

But even some of the highest-paying large departments are still struggling to get new hires in the door.

“I don’t think it’s all about money. I think it’s about the way people perceive their job and feel they are going to be supported,” Wexler said. “You have West Coast departments that are paying six figures, but still seeing major challenges in hiring.”

In addition to pay and bonuses, many agencies are reexamining their application requirements and hiring processes.

Wexler believes some of those changes make sense, including allowing visible tattoos, reweighing the importance of past financial issues and processing applicants’ background checks faster. But he cautioned that PERF does not support lowering standards for training or for applicants.

Maria “Maki” Haberfeld, chair of the Department of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice Administration at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, says departments have been too focused on officer numbers. She worries some are lowering education requirements and other standards to bolster numbers instead of trying to find the best people to police their communities.

“Policing is a real profession that requires more skills and more education than people can understand,» she said. «It’s not about tattoos or running a mile in 15 minutes. It’s really more about emotional intelligence, maturity and making those split-second decisions that don’t use deadly force.”

Haberfeld also cautioned that any staffing gains made through incentives could easily be erased, especially as officers, including some in riot gear, have been seen breaking up protests against the Israel-Hamas war at universities across the country.

“In policing, it takes decades to move forward and a split second for the public attitude to deteriorate,” she said.

PERF’s survey showed a more than a 20% drop in resignations overall, from a high of almost 6,500 in 2022 to fewer than 5,100 in 2023. They are still up over early pandemic levels in 2020, however, when a few more than 4,000 officers resigned across all responding departments.

As with the hiring increases, the rate of decrease in retirements tended to depend on the size of the departments. There were fewer retirements in 2023 than in 2019 at large departments, slightly more retirements at medium departments and elevated retirements at small departments. The survey found a steep drop in resignations at large agencies with 250 or more officers and medium-size agencies with between 50 and 249 officers.

In addition to pay and benefit increases, the improved retention can be partly attributed to a shift in how some public officials view their public safety departments, Wexler says.

“We went from having public discourse about defunding the police just a few years ago to public officials waking up to the fact their workforce is leaving,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any question that there has been a sea change among political leaders.”

Eagles GM Howie Roseman is confident in his early-round draft picks from Toledo, Houston Christian

draft
Philadelphia Eagles first round draft pick Quinyon Mitchell holds up his jersey at an NFL football news conference in Philadelphia, Friday, April 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Chris Szagola)

Who needs to draft prospects from the Power Five to build a Super Bowl contender?

The Philadelphia Eagles might soon find out after taking an unconventional approach in the NFL draft. General manager Howie Roseman used a first-round pick on Toledo cornerback Quinyon Mitchell and a third-round selection on Houston Christian linebacker Jalyx Hunt.

Surely those two were on every Eagles fan’s mock draft board.

Only the most diehard college football fans in Philadelphia — of which there are few — and the most dogged Eagles scouts — of which there are many — had much of a report on Mitchell or Hunt. While the picks seemed outside the box, Roseman said it’s not out of the ordinary to find players of that caliber out of more than 400 scouting reports that he receives.

It may have been a surprise to some — it’s just not necessarily the new norm.

«They’re the best players,» Roseman said. “The SEC guys are still playing against great competition. I think these were kind of two extenuating circumstances because of the particular guys. Probably wouldn’t say it’s going to be a trend.”

The Eagles stuck to picks from more familiar football schools with 2023 All-America cornerback Cooper DeJean of Iowa in the second round and Clemson running back Will Shipley in the fourth.

“Once you draft them, it’s what they do in the NFL,” Roseman said. “We bring them in here and we talk about it a lot, we got to develop the player and the person. We’re still talking about a young guy coming to Philadelphia, and I think at this point it’s all what he does from here. Whatever happened pre-draft, none of that matters. Wherever they’re picked, none of that matters.”

EXTENSION TIME

The biggest move of the draft had nothing to do with picks and rounds.

It had to do with an extension — the Eagles and wide receiver A.J. Brown agreed to a three-year extension that included $84 million guaranteed. Brown is set to become the highest-paid receiver in the NFL at $32 million a season.

He had 106 catches for 1,456 yards last season after he had 88 catches for 1,496 yards in 2022 in his first season with the Eagles.

“We try to be proactive to try to keep this team together,” Roseman said. “That starts with (owner) Jeffrey (Lurie) and his support (and) the benefits of trying to keep it together as much as we possibly can. The only way we can possibly do that is by doing deals early. We felt like it was an opportunity to do that here with A.J. Obviously we’ve done a bunch of deals with a bunch of our players, and want to add to that and keep this team together as much as we possibly can.”

DEJEAN COVETED

The Eagles liked DeJean. Like, really liked him.

The Eagles traded picks No. 50, No. 53, and No. 161 to the Washington Commanders in exchange for picks that landed them DeJean.

The 6-foot, 203-pound DeJean, who had seven interceptions in two seasons at Iowa, was considered a first-rounder by the Eagles. It was one reason they were willing to trade the picks to move up for their shot at drafting him.

The Eagles weren’t alone in the assessment of DeJean — he even thought he should have been a first-rounder.

“Obviously there’s a little frustration,” he said. “but I’m excited with where I’m at, being in Philadelphia, being able to play for a great organization.”

Lurie told Roseman it was “rare for us to be picking in the 20s and to get two first-round players.”

“Both those guys were first-round players for us,” Roseman said. “We didn’t have 32 first-round guys, so when you get that opportunity to get two first-round guys, especially picking where we were, we felt like it was an opportunity and it was obviously an area we wanted to address. We felt like we addressed a lot of the areas of our football team through free agency, but that was one area we could address.”

CORNERING THE MARKET

Mitchell might be talented enough to earn a starting spot in the NFL. But can he immediately crack the Eagles’ lineup?

He was widely considered the top cornerback in the draft — he ran a 4.33-second 40-yard dash at the combine. The Eagles have plenty of depth with Darius Slay and James Bradberry returning as starters, at least for now.

“We didn’t feel like we had to a take a corner in the first round but it was the highest-ranked player on our board at a position that we would like to get some younger players here,” Roseman said. “We got some younger players last year and we like those younger players. We wanted to add some competition at the corner position.”

FAMIILAR FACE

The Eagles traded up Saturday to pick at No. 155 and select Clemson linebacker Jeremiah Trotter Jr.

Yes, the son of that Jeremiah Trotter — an Eagles great, an All-Pro and a four-time Pro Bowl selection.

The younger Trotter wears his dad’s No. 54, plays the same position and celebrates sacks and big tackles with the same signature axe swing.

Trotter was a finalist last year at Clemson for the Dick Butkus Award given to the best linebacker in the country. Trotter was projected to be drafted as high as the second round and some draft analysts believed only his size — he’s 6-foot and 238 pounds — kept him out of the first round.

His father was drafted by the Eagles in the third round of the 1998 draft.

Suárez’s scoreless innings streak ends in otherwise brilliant effort in Phillies win over Padres

Suárez's
Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Ranger Suárez throws to a San Diego Padres batter during the first inning of a baseball game Saturday, April 27, 2024, in San Diego. (AP Photo/Brandon Sloter)

SAN DIEGO— Ranger Suárez’s scoreless streak ended at 32 innings but he was otherwise brilliant through eight innings and Alec Bohm homered and drove in four runs for the Philadelphia Phillies, who beat the San Diego Padres 5-1 Saturday night to win the weekend series.

Suárez’s scoreless streak, the longest in the majors this season and of his career, ended when he allowed Eguy Rosario’s two-out home run in the eighth inning. Suárez (5-0) allowed just three hits and struck out eight with no walks to win his fifth straight start.

Suárez threw 96 pitches. Jeff Hoffman struck out the side in the ninth and the game lasted just 2 hours, 9 minutes.

Suárez said he wasn’t concerned about his scoreless streak, which tied for fifth-longest in franchise history.

“If I did keep it going, then OK. But that was not my focus,” he said through an interpreter. «I was just focusing pitching good innings and helping the team win.»

Manager Rob Thomson said Suárez probably would have gone out for the ninth if he had the shutout intact.

“Soft contact, stuff was really good,” Thomson said. “He had it all going. He was getting ahead of hitters and staying ahead of hitters. No walks all night. But I thought he had all his pitches going.

“He’s just having fun playing baseball right now,” the manager said.

Bohm, the third baseman, said it’s “been fun” playing behind Suárez.

“It’s a quick pace. He fills up the zone. There’s a lot of action,” Bohm said. «He’s not a guy going up there and pitching for strikeouts. He got quite a few tonight. But he’s attacking hitters. He gets soft contact. The infielders are fully engaged when he’s pitching.”

The Padres have been punchless in the first two games of this series after blowing a 9-4 lead at Colorado on Thursday and losing 10-9. They’ve lost three straight for the second time in a span of 10 games.

“Surgical’s the best way of saying it,” Padres manager Mike Shildt said about losing to Aaron Nola and then Suárez. “Suárez was tremendous. I mean, he threw the ball very well. Up, down, in, out. You think about the disruption of hitters’ timing and getting guys off balance.”

Bohm extended his hitting streak to 11 games. He hit a two-run homer to left field with two outs in the first, his fourth, and added a two-run single in the three-run fifth. Both were off Dylan Cease.

It was the Phillies’ sixth homer in the first two games of this series.

Cease (3-2) loaded the bases with two outs in the fifth and walked Bryce Harper to make it 3-0. Bohm followed with a two-run single to right. Trea Turner had three hits and scored on both of Bohm’s big hits.

Cease allowed five runs and six hits in six innings, struck out five and walked three.

UP NEXT

Phillies RHP Taijuan Walker, on the injured list since spring training with right shoulder soreness, is scheduled to make his season debut in the series finale on Sunday opposite Padres RHP Michael King (2-2, 4.11 ERA).

Comienza cuenta regresiva para prohibición de TikTok en EE. UU. ¿qué viene ahora?

Una creadora de contenidos de TikTok, sostiene un cartel "TikTok cambió mi vida para bien" frente al Capitolio de EE. UU., en Washington, el 23 de abril de 2024. (Foto: VOA)

Ya comenzó el plazo de nueve meses para una prohibición de TikTok en EE. UU. si la plataforma no se desprende de sus lazos en China. ¿Qué viene ahora y cuál ha sido la reacción tras la decisión del Congreso?

La firma de una ley que prohibiría TikTok en Estados Unidos inició esta semana la cuenta regresiva para que la aplicación se desvincule de China si quiere permanecer en el país, al tiempo que avivó el debate sobre la libertad de expresión y causó indignación de miles de tiktokers que aseguran que la plataforma les ha cambiado la vida.

La popular aplicación, con más de 1.700 millones de usuarios en el mundo, es una de las redes sociales más populares del planeta. Inicialmente vista como un sitio para compartir videos cortos de coreografías y entretenimiento, ha evolucionado en una herramienta para nativos digitales, quienes aseguran recibir sus noticias, información útil y conectar con sus pares a través de TikTok.

Precisamente fue la popularidad de la app la que sonó las alarmas de legisladores y autoridades gubernamentales en EE. UU., preocupados por la posibilidad de que su empresa matriz ByteDance, localizada en China, pudiera tener acceso a los datos de 170 millones de usuarios estadounidenses.

Después de meses de debates en el Congreso e incluso audiencias con el director ejecutivo de TikTok, Shou Zi Chew, el presidente Joe Biden firmó el miércoles la ley de asistencia internacional que incluye la posible prohibición. Minutos después, Chew aseguró en un tiktok: «Tengan la seguridad: no iremos a ninguna parte».

¿Tik Tok unido a una ley sobre ayuda militar internacional?

La legislación que pone un plazo a ByteDance para que venda TikTok fue aprobada en marzo con gran apoyo en la Cámara de Representantes, pero no había llegado al Senado hasta ahora.

Para garantizar su avance, esta fue incluida en un paquete millonario de ayuda a Ucrania, Israel y Taiwán que languidecía en la Cámara de Representantes, controlada por republicanos, quienes exigían leyes migratorias más duras por parte de la administración del demócrata Biden para su aprobación.

Según los analistas, la adhesión de la legislación contra TikTok se produjo mientras líderes de las bancadas trabajaban para ganar votos para los proyectos de ley de asistencia internacional, y después de negociaciones con el Senado sobre el plazo que ByteDance tendría para vender su participación y garantizar que la aplicación continúe operando en EE. UU.

La amenaza que presenta TikTok contra la Seguridad Nacional es un elemento de rara unión bipartidista, en un momento en que la política estadounidense se encuentra extremadamente polarizada. «Esto es un recordatorio de lo que Estados Unidos puede hacer cuando nos unimos a pesar de nuestras diferencias», dijo el presidente de la Cámara, el republicano Mike Johnson.

Aunque su campaña de reelección tiene una cuenta oficial en la aplicación, Biden prohibió en 2022 el uso de TikTok en dispositivos del gobierno y su administración ha expresado preocupación sobre el hecho de que la app estaría legalmente obligada a reportar y compartir datos sobre sus usuarios con Beijing, que mantiene un control férreo sobre las compañías chinas. Esto es especialmente delicado en un año electoral.

«Estos datos pueden ser usados para desinformación y amplificación de mensajes que favorecen al régimen chino o, inclusive, candidatos que ellos quisieran, que saben que los van a ayudar o personajes que los van a ayudar», explicó a la Voz de América, el experto en seguridad cibernética, Rod Sotto.

TikTok insiste en que nunca ha compartido datos de EE. UU. y que nunca lo haría.

¿Qué viene ahora?

A partir de la firma de la ley, comenzó la cuenta regresiva de 270 días en los que ByteDance debe vender TikTok. Este plazo podría ser extendido, una decisión que recaería en el próximo presidente de EE. UU., debido a que el período inicial termina en enero de 2025, cuando toma posesión el mandatario elegido en noviembre.

Sin embargo, se espera que la aplicación presente una demanda para intentar detener el mandato. Además, podrían solicitar una orden judicial preliminar que congele temporalmente la aplicación de la ley mientras avanza el caso, como hizo la plataforma en 2023 ante una prohibición similar en el estado de Montana.

Si TikTok tiene éxito en los tribunales, el proceso de venta forzosa se detiene, lo que podría darle más tiempo a la aplicación para operar libremente en EE. UU.

Mientras tanto, los 170 millones de usuarios estadounidenses no deberían ver cambios en su aplicación hasta principios de 2025. Después de ese plazo, si ByteDance no vende su participación en la app, esta desaparecería de las tiendas de aplicaciones de Apple y Google. No se permitirán nuevas descargas y los tiktokers existentes, no podrán actualizar a versiones nuevas. No se sabe aún hasta que punto esto imposibilitaría el acceso.

Más allá de los usuarios casuales y sus molestias por no poder acceder a su app preferida, para miles de creadores de contenido como Nicole Tortolani, quien aseguró a la Voz de América que con TikTok desaparecería la mitad de sus ingresos mensuales.

«Siendo parte importante de mis ingresos, generaría un desbalance en lo que vienen siendo mis finanzas y estabilidad, al igual que la de muchísimos creadores. Mi contenido se enfoca principalmente en mi estilo de vida, comparto todo acerca de mí y me gusta muchísimo promover, promocionar campañas publicitarias sobre productos y servicios que recomiendo», agregó la influencer.

Alentados por TikTok, que ha gastado millones en campañas publicitarias favorables a su operación, tiktokers – mayormente jóvenes- han levantado los teléfonos por primera vez para llamar a sus representantes en el Congreso y protestar contra la decisión.

No obstante, la administración Biden asegura que no busca la desaparición de la app. «No queremos ver una prohibición», dijo el martes la secretaria de Prensa de la Casa Blanca, Karine Jean-Pierre. «Se trata de la propiedad (sobre TikTok) de la República Popular China», añadió.

¿Qué dice TikTok y por qué invoca la Primera Enmienda?

«No se equivoquen: esto es una prohibición de TikTok», enfatizó el director ejecutivo Chew, en el mensaje que publicó tras la firma de la ley el miércoles. También destacó que TikTok continuaría operando al tiempo que desafía las restricciones.

Los expertos especulan sobre si aparecerá algún comprador potencial con los recursos financieros para adquirir TikTok, y se preguntan si la operación de venta deberá estar sancionada por agencias gubernamentales de China y Estados Unidos.

Esta batalla legal contra TikTok en EE. UU. se ha librado en los últimos cuatro años como uno de los frentes principales en el diferendo entre Washington y Beijing sobre tecnología.

TikTok ha dicho que está listo para invocar la Primera Enmienda de la Constitución estadounidense que garantiza la protección a la libertad de expresión. En noviembre, un juez estadounidense en Montana bloqueó la prohibición estatal de TikTok, bajo este motivo.

«Es desafortunado que la Cámara de Representantes esté utilizando la fachada de importante ayuda extranjera y humanitaria para avanzar una vez más un proyecto de ley de prohibición que pisotearía los derechos de libertad de expresión de 170 millones de estadounidenses», dijo TikTok en un comunicado.

Para Nicole Tortolani «expresarse libremente nunca debería ser motivo para la cancelación de una plataforma, que a pesar de tener sus desventajas como todas, hay muchísimas personas que la utilizan como fuente de entretenimiento, fuente de ingreso e inclusive una forma de aprendizaje».

«A mí me parece injusta la cancelación de la plataforma y considero que se pudieran buscar alternativas más factibles para el funcionamiento y la continuidad de TikTok», concluyó.

El experto de HackMiami, Rod Sotto, no lo ve tan claro. «Yo pienso que las personas que están diciendo eso no entienden que aquí no se está censurando TikTok. Aquí lo que se está pidiendo es que el régimen, un régimen que censura y que prohíbe aplicaciones americanas en China, sea dueño de una plataforma que obtiene datos y lo envía a China».

«Esto es un sentido común. Aquí no hay censura. Tiktok se puede vender y puede seguir siendo, inclusive, hasta mejor», insistió.

Desacuerdo en el Congreso

Gran parte de los legisladores coinciden en que TikTok plantea amenazas para la seguridad nacional.

«Muchos jóvenes en TikTok reciben noticias (de la aplicación), la idea de que le daríamos al Partido Comunista (chino) esta herramienta de propaganda, así como la capacidad de extraer datos personales de 170 millones de estadounidenses, es un riesgo para la seguridad nacional», dijo a CBS el senador demócrata Mark Warner, presidente del Comité de Inteligencia del Senado.

A pesar de la rara unidad en el tema, para un grupo de congresistas no tiene sentido una ley como esta, que podría no sobrevivir a una batalla legal en los tribunales.

«No creo que vaya a pasar el escrutinio de la Primera Enmienda», dijo el demócrata Ro Khanna a la cadena ABC.

Parlamentos en otros países también han expresado preocupación por la influencia de Beijing. En 2020, India prohibió TikTok junto con docenas de otras aplicaciones de desarrolladores chinos, alegando posibles brechas de seguridad y la integridad nacionales. Nepal estableció una prohibición similar en noviembre pasado.

Junto a EE . UU., Australia, Canadá y Nueva Zelanda desterraron TikTok de los dispositivos del gobierno.