![]() A search for “National Rape Day” on the platform brings up a page with sexual assault resources but no debunk for the viral misinformation. The aforementioned #April24 hashtag has since been removed, but other related hashtags such as #april24th, #24april and even #april24purge are still accessible and have well over 100 million views collectively. Misinformation, even when it is coming from those with ostensibly good intentions, can still cause harm. It would appear that the overwhelming majority of engagement with the National Rape Day hoax is coming from those condemning or expressing fear about it. Threatening comments like this are difficult to find in a sea of videos warning women of dangers and promising to hurt the men who hypothetically participate. Many of the videos illustrate users' fear of the hoax, with creators claiming they’ll be locking themselves in their rooms and not attending school or work on April 24. In one video with 2.1 million views, a user says, “I don’t care how illegal it is in California, i will be walking to work on april 24th with the safety off and the full intent of pulling the tr!gger if y’all try smthn.” On another video discussing the hoax, a user comments, “Bro I’m so scared I don’t want to go to school but I have to” to which the creator of the video replies: “Carry a weapon on you that’s what I do.” Some users are discussing their intention to carry weapons that day, including tasers and handguns. Users have taken to TikTok to warn one another about the return of National Rape Day (sometimes referred to simply as “April 24th”). ![]() It appears the National Rape Day hoax has returned for 2023. Users seized upon instances of unrelated sexual violence –– including the murder of a 19-year-old girl in Minneapolis just prior to Ap–– as evidence of the hoax’s validity. As a result of this rampant misinformation, an 11-year-old brought knives to school in the U.K. With trolls anonymously declaring their intent to participate in sexual assault, other TikTok users spreading panic, and other creators posting videos vowing to use violence in the name of protecting women (in one video with over 822,000 views a man says, “If u were thinkin about participating on April 24th just remember April 25 is national k1ll a day”), the lines between joke, hoax, and genuine belief blurred to create panic on the app. However, sexual violence committed against friends, co-workers, relatives, and intimate partners is a daily occurrence - an American is sexually assaulted every 68 seconds. There is also no evidence that online communities are self-organizing to randomly assault strangers at a predetermined date and time. The idea that sexual assault would be legalized for a day is obviously a fiction. In particular, it drastically overstates the prevalence of sexual assault committed by strangers, disregarding the reality that the vast majority ( 83%) of victims of sexual violence know their aggressor. This hoax capitalizes on legitimate fears of sexual violence and perpetuates harmful myths surrounding the reality of sexual assault. The hoax gained further legitimacy through poor media coverage, which amplified the panic, as well as participation in the trend from some members of law enforcement on TikTok. At the time, a Media Matters study found that 48 of the top 50 TikTok videos under the “#April24” hashtag contained misinformation and none of the videos provided a debunk or any factual information. It seems that shortly after this tweet, the hoax started to spread on TikTok, where it went viral. ![]() The earliest mention of “National Rape Day” on social media that Media Matters could identify was a tweet from April 11, 2021, that read, “Please if you are in the uk, be safe, the boys have made a ‘national rape’ day and that’s tomorrow.” A screenshot of the tweet was circulating on 4chan’s /pol message board the next day. ![]() While the “National Rape Day” hoax had been previously floating around the collective consciousness as an urban legend, it found new levels of virality through TikTok’s recommendation algorithm in 2021. ![]() Now, the same hoax is reemerging on the very same social media platform, which seems unable or unwilling to curtail the spread of viral misinformation. Videos garnered millions of views claiming that on April 24, 2021, large groups of men planned to sexually assault women en masse. In April 2021, a hoax called “National Rape Day” went viral on TikTok. ![]()
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