UpScrolled was founded in July 2025 by Issam Hijazi, a Palestinian-Jordanian-Australian developer who formerly worked with Big Tech companies like Oracle and IBM IMAGE/Screen grab
Disgruntled TikTok users are flocking to the platform which is promising a ‘transparent tech’ experience.
UpScrolled, a social media application created by
Palestinian-Jordanian-Australian entrepreneur Issam Hijazi, has surged
in popularity across several countries, including the United States, as
many users looked for an alternative to TikTok, which was formally taken over by US-backed investors and companies last week.
With Larry Ellison, the owner of Oracle, who is a staunch supporter of Israel and a friend of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, acquiring a stake in TikTok’s US-based entity, social media users have expressed concerns about censorship of pro-Palestine posts on the popular app. TikTok’s global operation will still be run by its Chinese owner, ByteDance.
On Wednesday, TikTok permanently bannedEmmy Award-winning journalist
and Al Jazeera contributor from Gaza, Bisan Owda, sparking outrage and
boycott calls from her supporters. The app has also been accused of
content censorship around unprecedented ICE violence in the US.
UpScrolled,
which was founded only a year ago, surprisingly climbed to the top spot
of US app downloads this week, ranking number one in the “social
networking” category of Apple’s App Store free apps by Wednesday. It was
also among the top apps downloaded by Apple users in the United
Kingdom, Canada and Australia.
The app, meanwhile, is gaining
thousands of new downloads as disgruntled TikTok users flock to the
platform, pulled by its promise of “transparent tech”. The flood of new
users momentarily crashed the platform’s servers over the weekend,
UpScrolled reported.
A new ProPublica investigation reveals new details about a sprawling ICE
detention complex where families describe horrific conditions inside,
such as being served contaminated food, with children and parents at
times finding worms in their meals. Lights are reportedly left on for 24
hours a day. South Texas Family Residential Center, in the town of
Dilley a few dozen miles from the southern border with Mexico, detains
an estimated 3,500 people, more than half of them children. “I have
never felt so much fear to go to a place as I feel here. … Once I go
back to Honduras, a lot of dangerous things could happen to my mom and
I,” a 14-year-old detained at Dilley, Ariana Velasquez, told ProPublica.
There are also mounting reports of psychological abuse by guards, some
of whom have allegedly threatened families with separation. “Many of the
children who are now being sent there are being arrested by ICE
around the country, and some of them, like Ariana, have been living [in
the U.S.] for years,” says Mica Rosenberg, investigative reporter at
ProPublica.
Transcript
This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org. I’m Nermeen Shaikh, with Amy Goodman.
“The Children of Dilley.” That’s the title of a new ProPublica investigation into the South Texas Family Residential Center, a sprawling ICE
detention complex in the town of Dilley, a few dozen miles from the
southern border with Mexico. It’s run by the private prison company
CoreCivic. Dilley was first opened by the Obama administration in 2014.
In a moment, we’ll be joined by a ProPublica investigative reporter
who went inside Dilley. But first we turn to the voices of two children
held inside. This is a 9-year-old girl from Venezuela, Susej Fernández,
speaking to ProPublica, describing what life is like for her at Dilley,
where she’s been held for over 50 days.
SUSEJ FERNÁNDEZ:
hhHonestly, honestly, I don’t feel good, because there’s always, always an officer around, like, bothering me. I can’t go anywhere. And if I need to go to the bathroom, they won’t let me, because I have to go with my mom. So it’s annoying, and I just have to stay in my room.
AMY GOODMAN:
And this is 14-year-old Ariana Velasquez reading a letter she wrote
while detained at Dilley. She’s a high school student from Honduras
who’s lived in the United States with her mom for seven years.
ARIANA VELASQUEZ:
Hello. My name is Ariana V. I’m 14 years old, and I’m from Honduras.
I’ve been detained for 45 days, and I have never felt so much fear to go
to a place as I feel here. Every time I remind myself that once I go
back to Honduras, a lot of dangerous things could happen to my mom and
I. My younger siblings haven’t been able to see their mom in more than a
month. They’re very young, and you need both of your parents when
you’re growing up. Since I got to this center, all you will feel is
sadness and mostly depression.
NERMEEN SHAIKH: Those were the words of Ariana Velasquez, a 14-year-old girl from Honduras detained at Dilley.
We’re joined now by ProPublica investigative reporter Mica Rosenberg.
Welcome to Democracy Now!, Mica. Tell us more about Ariana’s story and the children detained at Dilley whom you spoke to.
MICA ROSENBERG: Yeah. Thank you so much for having me.
And I think one of the main takeaways here is that children who are
at this center — in the past, the center had mainly been used to hold
families who were recently crossing the border, many who — since the
Obama administration, it’s been open, and families were coming there in
the hopes of coming into the United States for the first time. But now
there’s been a real shift, because border crossings have dropped to
record lows, and many of the children who are now being sent there are
being arrested by ICE around the country. And
some of them, like Ariana, have been living here for years. You know,
they speak perfect English, as you heard. They were detained sometimes
in the middle of their school years. And in some cases, they’re now
entrenched American lives. In the case of Ariana, she has two younger
U.S. citizen brothers and — a brother and sister, a kindergartner and a
toddler, who were not sent to the detention center. So, she was — she
and her mother were separated from them.
AMY GOODMAN:
Can you talk, Mica, about CoreCivic running Dilley? And talk about who
is profiting financially from the locking up of children.
Pepe Escobar is a Brazilian geopolitical journalist and author with decades of experience covering global power shifts, energy politics, and Eurasian integration. A seasoned foreign correspondent, he has reported from across Asia and Europe. He is a permanent columnist at The Cradle.
Before I go further here, let me qualify everything I’m saying
here with a warning: I have no crystal ball from which to give people
investment advice. However, I do know logic and arithmetic, apparently
unlike Donald Trump, so I can draw out some hypothetical situations,
which is what I do below.
There has been much discussion, both here and around the world,
of the possibility of a flight from the dollar. This has always been a
serious risk since Donald Trump took office, but the risk increased
enormously from his deranged rant at the World Economic Forum in Davos
last week.
Virtually everyone who was not on Trump’s payroll acknowledged
that the speech was both scary and incoherent. He made threats to our
allies, boasted about imposing tariffs based on personal whims, and
displayed an extraordinary ignorance of major world events. With Trump
commanding extraordinary powers as president as a result of a docile
Republican Congress and servile Supreme Court the United States does not
look like a good place to park your money.
There have already been some prominentinstances
of pension funds pulling their holdings out of Treasury bonds and other
US assets, but this is the less important part of the story. Most of
the money at risk of leaving the United States is not held by public
pension funds which may announce their decision to make a political
point.
Rather, most of the money at risk of fleeing is held by private
corporations and banks, and wealthy individuals, who would pull their
money out of the United States because they think that Donald Trump’s
America is a bad investment. There are literally trillions of dollars
that could be leaving.
To correct one of the silly things often said by people who
should know better: No individual, bank, or corporation is asking where
to park one, two, or three trillion dollars. This scenario is supposed
to leave them paralyzed in any effort to leave dollar assets, because
there is no good alternative country where they can park $4 trillion.
But that is not how the financial system works. The big
investors are asking where they can park $10 billion, $50 billion, or
$200 billion, and the answer is there are plenty of places where this
sort of money can be placed with reasonable safety, including the
European Union, Brazil, China, India, the United Kingdom and Canada. A
flight from the dollar running into the trillions would be the result of
tens of thousands of decisions to pull millions or billions of dollars
out of dollar denominated assets.
I don’t know if we are seeing the beginning of this sort of
flight, but if we are, we can say with some degree of confidence that
the dollar, along with the US stock and bond markets, are headed lower.
If that is the case, there is an obvious strategy for people in the
United States: join the flight
Rajab at her graduation ceremony for senior kindergarten IMAGE/ Wikimedia Commons
January 29, 2026, marks the second year since the Israeli military, using U.S. provisioned weapons, murdered
Hind Rajab. Had she lived, this little Palestinian girl who liked to
dress up as a princess would now be 7 ½ years old. An Israeli Defense
Force unit fired a barrage of missiles at the car in which she and her
relatives were fleeing from an Israeli military invasion of their
neighborhood.
The family’s fatal ordeal began on January 29, 2024, in Tel al-Hawa,
an area south of Gaza City, when Israeli forces ordered Hind’s family to
evacuate from their home. Hind’s mother, Wissam Hamada, and an older
sibling set forth on foot. It was raining heavily, and Hind’s mother
didn’t want her walking through the storm. Hind joined her aunt, uncle,
and four cousins as they fled by car from invading Israeli forces.
Hoping to reach a shelter at the Al Ahli hospital, Hind’s uncle sought
advice from the Palestine Red Crescent office about what route would be
safe to take. But before they could find refuge, the Israeli military
fired on their car, immediately killing Hind’s aunt, uncle and three of
her cousins.
Her surviving cousin, fifteen-year-old Layan, was able to re-connect,
by phone, with relief workers at the Palestinian Red Crescent office.
That conversation ended when Layan screamed that the tank was very near
and the relief workers then heard an explosion. Hind watched in horror
as Layan was killed. The relief workers called Hind. The utterly
frightened girl answered, and they urged her to remain hidden in the car
and try to be calm. Rescuers would come, they said. But it would be
suicidal for relief workers to set forth without first coordinating with
the Israeli military. It took several hours for the Israeli military to
give clearance for two ambulance workers to travel the approved route,
an eight-minute drive, in hopes of rescuing Hind.
Surrounded by the corpses of her family members, Hind pleaded with
the Red Crescent workers to come soon. “I’m so scared,” she told them.
“Please come.”
But when the rescuers were within 162 feet of the vehicle where Hind was trapped, Israeli tank fired missiles assassinated them.
Hind’s voice continues reaching people. Three award winning films have told her story, awakening consciences, worldwide, to Israel’s ongoing genocide.
Hind’s voice echoes, tragically, in the pleas of Palestinian children
today who face torture and death at the hands of Israel’s genocidal
policy makers and militarists. Palestinian children living in makeshift
tents, soaked and chilled by winter storms, long for relief. Hind’s pure
innocence speaks for them, also, these little ones who could never be
mistaken for criminals or security threats, little ones who beg for
warmth and protection. The vocabulary changes slightly: Please come. I’m
so cold. Please come. I’m so sick.
Yet trucks laden with relief supplies remain blocked, at the border crossings, while children who are near death suffer under tortuous conditions.
More than 100 children are reported to have died in Gaza since the October 2025 ceasefire.
A January 26, 2026 UNICEF report notes
that Israel’s relentless attacks have decimated water and sewage
systems in Gaza. Since the onset of winter, heavy rainfall has caused
unsafe water to flood densely populated areas where people are crowded
into makeshift tents. The grounds become muddy, making hygiene nearly
impossible as people sleep in saturated clothes and bedding. Storms have
collapsed tents. Fuel for generators is scarce, and there has been no
central electricity for over two years.
Trump’s Board of Peace is an intricate play to maintain hegemony in the face of China’s rise, sparking talk of “a new world order” — but is the rules-based international order really worth saving?
As
U.S. hegemony continues to dwindle, Donald Trump and his international
allies are making preparations to maintain some grip on world power. One
of these methods includes the “Board of Peace,” which was ostensibly
created to reconstruct Gaza, but has demonstrated yet another attempt by
Trump to undermine international law.
Yanis Varoufakis, the Secretary-General of the Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 (DiEM25), the former Finance Minister of Greece and author of Technofeudalism: What Killed Capitalism
joins host Chris Hedges to discuss what the Board of Peace really means
and how it relates to Trump’s larger geopolitical goals, including one
seeking to curb China’s rising influence on the world stage.
When
it comes to the European Union, Varoufakis explains that European
nations are “freaking out about the Board of Peace not only replacing
the United Nations, but also targeting them. And this is what they get
for ignoring the very clear signs that Trump was sending their way, that
he’s out to get them, that he’s no longer interested in having vassals
that think that they are part of a Western multilateral design… it seems
to me that the Donald Trump policy is forcing his allies, so to speak,
firstly to accept that the genocide will continue. Secondly, not to dare
say anything about it. And third, go into these spasms of
quasi-autonomy.”
As for China, Varoufakis says that Trump
understands that the U.S. will have to coexist with the East Asian
nation but must also to rein in the Europeans while maintaining control
of the Western hemisphere, likening the tentacles of the American empire
to a bicycle wheel. “The bicycle wheel has a hub in the middle and it’s
got spokes… you can break one or two or three spokes and the wheel
still works,” Varoufakis says. “As long as you are the hub and you
negotiate with each spoke separately, you keep them separate and you
don’t allow them to get together and negotiate with you collectively,
then you can extend your hegemony and make a lot of money in the
process.”
The choice is socialism or barbarism, and the latter has a head start.
Ever since the 1990s, when to the longstanding cooptation of the
Western working class by social democracy was added the collapse of the
Soviet Union and its satellites, the saying has been popular among the
chattering classes that “it is easier to imagine the end of the world
than the end of capitalism.” As McKenzie Wark has noted, there was this
weird consensus among both its partisans and its critics that “Capital
is eternal. It goes on forever, and everything is an expression of its
essence.”
Lately, however, there have been attempts to meet the challenge of imagining the end of capitalism.
How Will Capitalism End?
One of the early efforts was the 2014 essay titled “How Will
Capitalism End?” by Wolfgang Streeck, the eminent former director of the
Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne. Taking the
bull by the horns, Streeck asserted, “I suggest we think about
capitalism coming to an end without assuming responsibility for
answering the question of what one proposes to put in its place. It is a
Marxist—or better: modernist—prejudice that capitalism as a historical
epoch will end only when a new, better society is in sight, and a
revolutionary subject ready to implement it for the advancement of
mankind.”
Streeck’s angle of approach to the question was quite original, one
derived from his familiarity with the work of the great Hungarian
sociologist Karl Polanyi. This was that capitalism had been so
successful in commodifying everything—or converting not only land and
labor but also formerly fenced off areas like knowledge, public
infrastructure, and the environment into commodities for market
exchange—that it was eliminating the very social, cultural, and
political conditions needed for its reproduction. A central assertion
was that the demands of profit-making had become so intense that capital
was destroying the very basis of sustainable capital
accumulation—labor—by pushing down living standards in the center
economies while allowing only extremely low wages in the economies of
the Global South to which it had fled.
Streeck was one of the first to advance the idea of a “polycrisis,”
that is, that owing to capitalism’s ability to erode the traditional
brakes put on its ability to transform everything into commodities,
crises were breaking out along different dimensions of societal
existence, and these crises had a negative synergy, enhancing the impact
of one another and thus magnifying their collective impact. These
interacting crises were producing what Streeck called the “five
disorders”—economic stagnation, oligarchic distribution, the annexation
of the public domain to private property, corruption, and global
anarchy.
Delinking Accumulation from Social Reproduction
Richard Westra advances a similar argument in his book The Political Economy of Post-Capitalism.
Capital accumulation can only take place if the profits extracted in
the production process are devoted not only to capitalist consumption
and investment but part of it is channeled into wages that enable those
that produce surplus value to physically reproduce themselves. He agrees
with Streeck that the social conditions for the reproduction of the
labor force are disappearing at a global level, as capital flees to the
poorer countries to avoid the high wages of workers in the advanced
economies while paying the bare minimum to workers in the Global South.
The theory behind the “lipstick index” is that when money is tight, consumers substitute costly purchases with cheap luxuries like lipstick. IMAGE/ PeopleImages via Getty Images
The past has shown that nontraditional measures like brothels, beer and lipstick can tell us a lot about the economy’s health.
While
some people anxiously watch the stock market for signs of a recession,
others look for more subtle cues that the economy is in trouble.
One of them is Catherine De Noire,
a manager of a legal brothel, a Ph.D. candidate in organizational
psychology and an influencer. When business at her brothel unexpectedly
dips, De Noire takes it as a sign that the economy is in trouble.
Although
De Noire is based in Europe, she believes that economic upheaval in the
United States “triggers huge uncertainty” across the pond because of
America’s global influence. De Noire first noticed a decline in business
right after Donald Trump was elected in November 2024, as Americans and the rest of the world anticipated upheaval.
Strippers in the U.S. are also feeling the pinch. Dancer and influencer Vulgar Vanity
said that when she first started dancing in 2022, she could earn six
figures just by dancing during a handful of big events in Austin, such
as the Formula 1 Grand Prix and South by Southwest music festival. This
year is different.
“I
didn’t even bother working South by Southwest because the first Friday
night I attempted to work, I walked into a completely empty club and
didn’t make any money at all,” she said.
Vanity
also says that many of her regular customers aren’t tipping at all or
tipping less than half of what they used to. She is quick to point out
that she is just one dancer and “obviously not an economist,” but she
notes that other dancers and tipped workers are also hurting. Her theory
is that her customers are no longer tipping as generously because of
rising costs and economic uncertainty. Vanity is worried that this means
we are on the verge of a recession or full-blown depression.
The company’s CEO says users are flooding the platform after the sale of TikTok in the U.S.
Within hours of the deal for TikTok’s U.S. operations being announced
last week, Issam Hijazi noticed a big uptick in users to his social
media platform UpScrolled. That stream of disgruntled users fleeing
TikTok over censorship concerns turned into a flood this week, crashing
UpScrolled’s servers.
UpScrolled, launched last July, supports text posts, photos,
short-form videos, stories and other features. It claims to be a
platform with “no censorship” and “no shadowbans.” On Monday, it ranked
among the top 10 free apps on Apple’s App Store, and No. 2 among social
network apps. It hit more than 1 million users from just 40,000.
“You all showed up so fast our servers tapped out,” UpScrolled said in an Instagram post
on Monday. “We’re a tiny team building an alternative to the platforms
that stopped listening to you. Right now, we’re scaling and running on
caffeine to keep up with what YOU started. Bear with us. We’re on it.”
Under the deal for TikTok’s operations, three managing investors
control 50% of the new U.S. entity: Oracle Corp., private equity firm
Silver Lake Management, and Abu-Dhabi-based investment company MGX.
Since the deal was finalized, #TikTokCensorship has been trending on
other platforms, with users claiming that TikTok is suppressing or
delaying videos about Palestine, as well as the fatal shooting in
Minneapolis of a man by federal immigration officers.
UpScrolled is backed by the Tech for Palestine incubator, an advocacy project that helps fund tech initiatives to support the Palestinian cause. Hijazi, a Palestinian-Australian, spoke to Rest of World on the sidelines of a conference on Saturday.
You saw a big jump in users after the TikTok deal was done. Why do you think that happened?
With the deal being signed, people thought, okay, that’s it, we’re
not going to be on TikTok anymore. Content moderation on TikTok is gonna
change. It has already changed. I know a lot of pro-Palestinians began
to get warnings; began to see their content being moderated. Their reach
has been really suppressed. This started a long time ago, but it has
been more severe in the past few days. In the past few days, we grew by
30,000-40,000 users. Most users are in the U.S, followed by Europe, UK,
Australia, with the rest from everywhere else.
What led you to build UpScrolled?
I worked for big tech companies. And then the genocide began [the
Israeli offensive following the October 7, 2023 attack by Palestinian
militant group Hamas was declared a genocide
by a United Nations commission]. I couldn’t take it anymore. I lost
family members in Gaza, and I didn’t want to be complicit. So I was
like, I’m done with this, I want to feel useful. I found this gap in the
market, with a lot of people asking why there is no alternative to the
Big Tech platforms for their content, which was getting censored. So I
thought, why don’t we build our own? I just rolled up my sleeves, and
built it.
In 1804,
Alexander Hamilton—founding father, architect of American finance, a man
whose face would one day adorn the ten-dollar bill—stood on a bluff
overlooking the Hudson River and allowed Aaron Burr to shoot him.
Hamilton, by most accounts, had intended to throw away his shot, to fire
into the air. He went to Weehawken, a town in New Jersey, not to kill
but to show his willingness to be killed. His honour demanded it. He
died the following afternoon, leaving behind a wife, seven children, and
a young nation that would spend the next two centuries trying to make
sense of such transactions.
What Hamilton died defending was a
phantom—a wound that existed only in the minds of those who believed in
it. Honour, unlike property or physical safety, cannot be touched or
measured. It is purely consensual, a shared hallucination that acquires
lethal force only when enough people agree to treat it as real. The
anthropologist Julian Pitt-Rivers, studying Mediterranean societies in
the mid-20th century, observed that honour functioned as a kind of
credit system: a man’s worth was not what he possessed but what others
believed he possessed. The duel, then, was a public audit, a
demonstration that one’s credit remained good.
The practice of
duelling gradually disappeared from Europe and North America by the late
19th century—a movement from what sociologists call “honour cultures”
to “dignity cultures”, in which individuals are expected to shrug off
insults rather than answer them with violence.