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"Since when did our faces become our butts?": Lucy Ahrish against the nudity culture on Instagram | Israel today

2022-08-02T06:11:46.192Z


The journalist and TV presenter posted a scathing post full of criticism of the culture of the revealing images published by young girls on social networks • "Female empowerment is not exposing your body with sexual innuendos," she wrote


For several days, Lucy Ahrish has been looking for the right words to help her express her firm opinion regarding the phenomenon where young girls reveal intimate parts of their bodies online in order to win the sympathy of surfers.

Last night (Monday) in the evening, she uploaded a question-filled story in her personal column on the Instagram social network, which has 75 thousand followers, in which she explained to Mina girls what the correct interpretation of the term "female empowerment" is.

"Well, I've been thinking about how to write this post for a few days," Aharish began her words.

"Someone is willing to explain to me this new phenomenon of girls taking pictures of their butts in a sexy pose, when they have their backs to the camera and their faces are half turned forward, and they emphasize their buttocks?", she asked angrily.

"Since when did our faces become our butts?! And when did girls here understand that if you reveal and upload pictures of your ass, it will increase your like index and you will be considered more popular, and that makes you more beautiful?", she continued to wonder.

"And why, for God's sake, even if you want to talk about it, there will be those who jump up and say that it is an expression of female empowerment," she hastened to reply to all those people who choose to criticize her words.

"And no, I'm not self-righteous or conservative, but female empowerment is not taking pictures of your ass for a like. Female empowerment is not exposing your body with blatant sexual innuendos," she stated.

"Feminine empowerment is your talent, your confidence, your wisdom, your intelligence, your beautiful face," she asked to sort out the definitions.

"What happened here on the road we passed to the girls whose ass is their business card?", she had a hard time understanding.

"Being sexy and sexual is not shameful, it's something a woman can and should be proud of, but the provocative expression of these concepts on social networks is problematic for us and the message we convey to our daughters."

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Source: israelhayom

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