#PeaceTok - how peace campaigners are using TikTok

How peace campaigners are using TikTok for Peace

by Julie Saumagne, first published in Peace News


With a billion users every month, TikTok has gone from a social media platform known for silly dances to a powerful political weapon. This has been demonstrated by the fact that two successive US presidents have tried to ban the app on ‘national security’ grounds.

Israeli soldier and social media influencer Natalia Fadeev gives her 2.7mn TikTok followers short, generally flirtatious, videos which often contain militaristic pro-Israeli propaganda.

www.tinyurl.com/peacenews4040

It has been shown that TikTok’s algorithms can determine a user’s political preferences after just 15 minutes of scrolling and then gradually place the user in an echo chamber where they only encounter views they agree with.

Warmongers know this and have flooded the app with hundreds of ‘MilTok’ (‘military TikTok’) influencers, with hashtags like #pewpew and #militarycurves. Some will be ‘bot’ accounts, automated programmes pretending to be real people.

The hashtag #NuclearWeapons throws up willy-waving videos of nuclear blasts, while #Peace is drowned in personal wellbeing content.

The visibility of peace campaigners is limited. We need a strategy to propel us onto TikTok. If we don’t push our message there, who will?

As London CND co-ordinator, I’ve led efforts to create a CND page. As a 24-year-old, you’d think I’d be in tune with the latest social media developments but believe me, nothing could have prepared me for this. Here’s a few things I’ve learnt.

1) TikTok is extremely weird

On downloading the app, you will be subjected to a chaotic variety of clips, from silly pranks to borderline porn. TikTok banks on surprising its users, so it always shows a mix of videos that correspond to established taste as well as the drastically different. So a real question for campaigners is: how far are you happy to go?

At CND, nobody felt comfortable dancing and lip-syncing, so we tried creating a different sort of content. The result has been interesting.

Even with a small number of followers, we got far more views on TikTok than a comparable Facebook or Twitter following would.

In our earliest days, with only 35 followers, we reached nearly 1,800 people with a video on the links between nuclear weapons and the climate crisis. Many videos on more established accounts, like @codepinkalert with nearly 40,000 followers, often get the same numbers of views – though they’ve been very good at creating viral content too! Being small at the start doesn’t mean you’ll be invisible.

This one-minute CND TikTok linked fossil fuels and war: www.tinyurl.com/peacenews4041

2) A not-so-social media

Unlike Facebook or Instagram, TikTok is not a platform aimed at connecting you to people you know. It is more of an entertainment space, a bit like Netflix but more participatory.

While Twitter encourages discussion, TikTok information is packaged. The focus is on the interaction between movement and music to create engaging content. This means TikTok isn’t intended for advertising events, but is most useful for raising awareness.

However, individuals do interact, and not always with the best intentions. The amount of trolling CND has received on TikTok is unprecedented. We have decided to allow comments, regardless of whether they’re positive or negative, because comments drive our videos up in the algorithms. We thank the trolls for their contribution to nuclear disarmament!

3) Tiktok will push your creativity

Even if you’re unwilling to go all the way into cute e-girl* territory, using TikTok is likely to inspire you to present your message in a radically different way.

CND commonly shares videos extracted from online webinars on Twitter or Facebook. This simply wouldn’t fly on TikTok. The pace of scrolling is so fast that the first few seconds really count. We’ve had to narrow down the points we wanted to make and try different methods with engaging opening graphics.

Give it a try! Here’s how we make most of our videos: first, film lots of short clips; then upload them onto TikTok and re-order them, placing the most engaging first; next choose music from the TikTok ‘Sounds’ library.

This still is from a 47-second TikTok video of a London CND demonstration at the US embassy in South London: www.tinyurl.com/peacenews4042

This process creates a narrative that we support with some text. It’s very intuitive and tutorials are available. Speaking to camera requires more preparation but is very engaging too.

It’s worth trying multiple strategies, and there is much value in peace campaigners working together to expand our online presence.

TikTok is shaping younger generations’ expectations of communication – the worst thing we can do is ignore it.

If you’re interested in exploring what I’ve named #PeaceTok, here’s a few accounts I recommend:

  • @nuclear_stories, for short explanatory videos on interesting nuclear weapons-related facts

  • @mackenzietalksnukes, an MA student discussing all things nuclear

  • @codepinkalert, CODEPINK’s TikTok page with a focus on peaceful actions

And give us a follow: @cnd_uk

Back from RAF Lakenheath [Photos]

On Saturday 20th May, CND organised a third national demonstration at RAF Lakenheath, a military base in the UK that is run by the US. This follows annoucements that the US Department of Defense has added the UK to a list of NATO nuclear weapons storage locations in Europe being upgraded under a multi-million dollar infrastructure programme. US nuclear bombs have recently been cleared for delivery to sites in Europe, this means that US nuclear weapons will be coming to RAF Lakenheath.

110 nuclear bombs were stored at the airbase but they were removed by 2008 following persistent popular protest. CND firmly opposes their return, which would only increase global tensions and put Britain on the frontline in a NATO/Russia war.

After a first action in May last year, and a second in November, protesters from London, Norwhich, Manchester, Leeds, Bradford, Sheffield, Derby and Nottingham returned with the same message: No US Nukes in Britain.

Here are some pictures of the day

(Photo credit: CND)

CND’s Tom Unterrainer

Click on the photo to expand:

Thanks to all who came!

In peace,

London CND

In remembrance of Maisie Carter

Maisie Carter

3 August 1927 – 26 March 2023


Maisie Carter was born in Bermondsey in 1927 at a time when it was a poor working-class district and Dr Alfred Salter and his wife Ada were active in the area working to improve the health and well-being of the local population.  Maisie remembered Dr Salter and his tireless work. She, too, went on to become a tireless campaigner for social justice and peace all her life and was involved in many organisations including the Communist Party, the Labour Party, the NUT, Merton and Sutton Trades Council, Palestinian Solidarity Campaign, and CND right up until the end of her long life. Maisie taught for many years at The Priory, C of E School in Queen’s Road, Wimbledon and combined her professional life with campaigning and her family, bringing up two boys, Mick and Stephen.

Maisie, with Joanna Bazley, was a founder member of Wimbledon Disarmament Coalition/CND in the 1980s during the Cruise missile crisis, which brought a resurgence of peace activity nearly everywhere.  Maisie was involved in all the activities of the group and was a longstanding member of the committee, for many years as the Chair.  The meetings at her cosy flat in Raynes Park were always accompanied by tea and biscuits.

She and Joanna were very much the driving force behind the annual fund-raising event, the Fete of the Earth. Maisie would arrive with her car so full of bric a brac it was impossible to think we could possibly get rid of it all.  She was often to be found selling raffle tickets or latterly behind the stall selling CND merchandise often supported by her daughter-in-law, Melody. After she was no longer able to attend the Sidmouth Folk Festival, where she had been instrumental in setting up an annual Hiroshima Day commemoration, she joined our annual gathering by Rushmere Pond on 6th August, and, with great effort and help from friends, was there in August 2022. She attended our weekly Vigil for Peace outside Wimbledon Library handing out leaflets and engaging with passersby, from its inception after 9/11 in 2001 until the pandemic finally brought it to an end in 2020.  She was also to be found each month on the Peace Table.

In the early 1990s, the then WDC/CND committee organised the planting of a Japanese cherry tree in Cannizaro Park, to commemorate those who died in the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. A replacement tree was planted in 2015, and when Maisie appealed to the Arboriculture department at Merton Council a new plaque was put up in 2019, to replace the original which had been stolen. She always took part in the annual Remembrance Day commemoration and after the main event would read a suitable piece of poetry to a small gathering of local CND members.

Maisie had many interests outside of campaigning for good causes.  Among other things she enjoyed trips to the theatre and cinema, reading and poetry.  Although in the last few years she was dogged by ill-health, she would still turn out for leafleting or the Peace Table, often looking rather fragile, but this was deceptive: she could still vigorously engage members of the public in discussion and stand up powerfully for the ideals in which she believedHer contribution to the local peace movement was immense and her influence was felt far beyond Wimbledon.  Maisie was a wonderful person and will be much missed by all of us.

- Wimbledon Disarmament Coalition -