Newest TikTok Trend Has People Terrorizing Their Cats To Taylor Swift Songs

TikTok is a major security risk to the country, a danger to the people using it, and a platform that encourages animal abuse. It’s time for the US government to take action.

The cat is wide-eyed with terror, his mouth moving in protest as his human picks him up.

“Spock already hates me so why not torture him more?” reads the caption on the TikTok video as the woman spins him around to Taylor Swift’s saccharine ballad August.

In another, a man in his 40s stares into the camera, snatches his cat up in one quick motion and then cackles gleefully as he spins his cat, who squirms in his grip and meows plaintively. One woman admitted her cat “hated every second of this” as she twirled her to the Swift track.

tiktokcatstrend
Cats subjected to the Taylor Swift “cat spinning” trend on TikTok.

There are hundreds, perhaps even thousands of these videos on TikTok, the Chinese government-controlled social media platform. Inexplicable as the trend is, it’s far from the first time people have abused and terrorized their cats for “lulz” and the approval of strangers on TikTok.

Previous trends had TikTok users picking their cats up upside-down and one-handed, then “answering” them as if they were telephones while reciting a line from the movie The Princess Diaries.

The 2021 holiday season saw the invention and propagation of a “hack” by someone who claimed that if you chase your cat around and brandish your Christmas tree like a weapon so the cat thinks you’re going to hit her with it, “it’ll be too scared to f**k with” the tree. Classy. The video of the woman terrorizing her cat piled up more than 25 million views and spawned innumerable imitators.

Then there was the “influencer” who smacked his cat around and uploaded footage of it, not by accident but because he says that’s how people properly “discipline” their pets. There are one-off abuse videos, and then there are trends that just won’t die, like the “prank” in which people frighten their cats half to death by placing cucumbers behind them while they’re eating.

TikTok is legitimately evil

More than any other platform, aided by an insidious algorithm that expertly keeps its users glued to the screen and scrolling, TikTok is a vehicle for social contagion, elevating the crass, the outrageous and the destructive as it lavishes clicks and revenue on people who behave abominably.

Just look at the case of Chloe Mitchell, the popular TikToker who nearly destroyed a non-profit animal shelter single-handedly when she threw a tantrum earlier this year. Mitchell enjoyed in excess of 50 million views on videos in which she invented wild stories painting the shelter as some sort of criminal operation run by “scammers” who, she claimed, enrich themselves by adopting out animals.

It would almost be funny for its absurdity if not for the fact that the shelter’s operations were crippled for two months as Mitchell’s followers called in death threats, review-bombed the shelter to ruin its reputation online and made its volunteers fear for their safety.

A major security risk

It baffles me why anyone would continue to use TikTok — or sign up to use it in the first place — when its operators admitted under oath that sensitive data belonging to American users is routinely accessed by the company’s headquarters in Beijing, despite many public assurances that the data was compartmentalized and available only to software engineers in TikTok’s US offices.

The company was also caught spying on journalists and is the subject of a Department of Justice investigation into its misuse of user data.

And if that isn’t reason enough for some people to uninstall the app, consider the fact that TikTok’s Beijing-based parent company, ByteDance, added code that makes the app an extremely malicious piece of spyware software capable of capturing every tap or keystroke by its users.

For those who aren’t well-versed in technical matters, this means having the app on any of your devices is tantamount to handing China’s government the keys to all of your online accounts, including banking and credit, as well as all your text, email and in-app correspondence. ByteDance can read the private texts you exchange with family members, see precisely what you’re doing on sites like Facebook and Youtube, and help itself to users’ most private information.

Some people might not understand the scope of the security risk because they may not know that every organization in China is subservient and ultimately accountable to the Chinese government and the communist party. The communist government can access data from Chinese companies at any time, force them to hand over their proprietary technology and research, and compel them to cooperate with cyber attacks on US citizens and infrastructure. In fact, it’s written into Chinese law. The government has total control over every Chinese corporation and, under President Xi Jinping, has tightened its grip on every layer of society.

It’s not difficult to imagine the Chinese government using the wealth of data collected by TikTok to compromise the devices of people who work on critical US infrastructure, like the power grid or defense systems, and use that access to retrieve their employee login credentials, providing access to the systems they work on.

Imagine cyberattacks that shut down power plants in Texas and across the southern US during severe weather like the deadly heat dome the country experienced this summer. Or Chinese government-sponsored hackers crippling US banking systems, leaving Americans without access to currency for days or weeks.

Then there are the “smaller” risks that are devastating on an individual level: A hacker compromises your devices and locks photographs of deceased loved ones that are priceless to you, or threatens to blast details about your private life to everyone in your contact list if you don’t pay them $10,000 in cryptocurrency.

Or maybe your information isn’t used in any particularly dramatic way, but in the aggregate becomes part of the great data pool the Chinese government uses to build and refine the most invasive social surveillance system in human history.

All that to use an app that promotes videos of people abusing their pets? No thanks. I hope the US government comes to its senses and bans the app from the US entirely before something catastrophic happens because if they don’t, it’s not a matter of if something disastrous will happen, but when.

24 thoughts on “Newest TikTok Trend Has People Terrorizing Their Cats To Taylor Swift Songs”

  1. To anyone who abuses their cat(s), I have this little “gift” for them:

    May the evil you cowards do
    Come back to you anew
    Two times two, times two, times two.
    As I will it, so make it true.

    It is done.

    Liked by 2 people

      1. I don’t think anyone wants to read about the horrific shit that’s on Youtube. It’s not neglect or abuse, it’s straight up torture and murder for an audience of sick people who get off on seeing animals harmed.

        I don’t even like thinking about it. It’s not good for mental health. Youtube won’t do anything about it unless the complaints come from major animal rights groups, so if you see something bad there, file a report with the SPCA or PETA and ask them to contact Youtube.

        Liked by 3 people

      2. I don’t know about Facebook, but getting Youtube to remove animal abuse videos is extremely difficult. An individual reporting abuse just doesn’t have enough influence to make Youtube
        react in most cases. Care to guess how I know?

        Liked by 1 person

      3. What, you saw the horrific videos of people torturing monkeys? Or that fucked up channel that shows cats that have been abused under the guise of “rescuing” them, even as the commenters make it clear they love seeing cats getting hurt and tortured?

        The stuff on Youtube is beyond disturbing. Google’s motto used to be “don’t be evil,” I understand why they don’t use that motto anymore.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. I left Facebook over 10 years ago because of sick murder of puppies. And Youtube was called out for killing of animals. I sign petitions almost every day regarding this crap.NOTHING will ever be done. Complaints do not work. I am on no social media sites because humanity is sick.

    Liked by 4 people

  3. I simply use Facebook to post news of petitions I have signed ( all for enviro or animal rights) you are correct TwitTok is simply stupidity for the masses. Orwell’s 1984 would have been very very proud of Tik Tok. I also support both Peta and Lady Freethinker in attempts to get YouTube (effectively Google) to remove animal torture videos to little if any effect so far but it needs to start somewhere – to force the change we need a massive revolution. This is unlikely any time soon because as Gilda correctly says Humanity is sick – however the natural world is slowly fighting back against us with viruses which are in fact the planet’s apex predator.

    Liked by 2 people

  4. To Quilpy. I only know about all this abuse and killings on social media sites is because i sign petitions on Change.org. and ForceChange.org. I cannot even read the whole petition anymore. What i saw on Facebook over 10 years ago will never leave my brain.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. To M. When i did cat rescue my friends hid stuff from me because they knew how sensitive i was. We went out one day to rescue some kittens. They asked me to stay outside to see if i saw the kittens mom. I knew they found some dead kittens. And i detest movies where they kill cats and dogs. I know it is not real but i hate it. That is why James Cameron, a vegan, will not do that shit in his movies.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. I suggest everyone watch Black Mirror. Best show on t.v. Considered the Twilight Zone of the tech age. Rod Serling was a visionary genius who predicted a lot of what is going on today.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Black Mirror is great. I like some of the heavier stuff like San Junipero and White Christmas, the ones like Hated In The Nation that are basically self-contained movies, and the more visceral stuff like Metalhead and Play Test.

      I think Metalhead is particularly frightening because the robot “dogs” in that episode look a heck of a lot like the real-life robots made by Boston Dynamics, which some police departments are beginning to use for things like EOD and hostage negotiation.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Just read on Lady Freethinker about a US dentist who pleaded guilty for paying someone in Indonesia $100 to torture a monkey.
    I wonder, has social media just exposed torturers and those who enjoy to see an animal suffer? Or does social media make people do these terrible things? Probably both.

    Liked by 1 person

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