Lessons of Babel   /   Summer 2025   /    Essays

Democracy by the Book

Is data the last lingua franca?

Antón Barba-Kay

THR illustration/top: Greggory DiSalvo, iStock; bottom: Shutterstock.

A senior researcher at Microsoft tells me that the sale of TikTok is more momentous to the fate of American democracy than the mobbing of the Capitol on January 6, 2021. He argues that the latter was a circumscribed event, while the enforced sale of TikTok will put the eyeballs of 170 million American users under the control of one of the two or three bidders already wealthy enough to buy it—such as Elon Musk. I find this view awfully grim, not because Musk has too many conflicts of interest to be a benign presence in government but because I find it dismaying that “American democracy” should occur in the same sentence with “TikTok,” let alone be identified with it. If the fate of American democracy rests on the ownership of TikTok, then maybe the towel has already been thrown in. 

It is more complicated than that, of course. But since one of the unshakable convictions of the digital age is that digital services are or could or might be democratic, it is high time we think through the truth of this truism. What hath TikTok—or our current digital environment as a whole—to do with democracy? Nothing good. Or so I will argue. I think we still have a flight line, which I’ll get to. If I spend most of my time trying to characterize the problem, it is because I think that the right answers to our predicament can be formulated only in response to problems rightly fathomed.

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