In their cossies at the beach. The open letter — which you can read in full here — goes like this:. I have some information that might interest you.

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Updated August 27, Advising female school students not to take nude photos misses the point. When society shames young women for being sexual, we can't be surprised when young men treat them with contempt. It is almost a cliche how quickly women are shamed, even when they are the victims of criminal behaviour as appears to be the case following reports of the exposure of a major child pornography ring in Australia. The news that teenage boys and men had been secretly stealing and exchanging sexual photos of school-age girls and women triggered widespread horror and condemnation and prompted investigations by police.
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Selfies, sexting and sexualisation
Advertising agencies, Hollywood producers and music executives have long known that sex sells. Now teens are using that same principle to sell themselves. She visited 10 states and talked to more than girls about everything from cyber-bullying to sexting. We want more attention. The Kardashians were referenced by teens in almost every chapter. The teens described taking dozens of photos to get the right look, and even then feeling like they had to use filters and apps to enhance their butt and face, or edit the pictures themselves in Photoshop. Most teens agreed. But not for a lack of trying. The teens described how some of their friends become Instafamous famous just on Instagram , and then there are the few who become YouTube stars. Famous for just being you.
Usually, this Texan mummy blogger gets one or two comments: this post has gone viral, sparking a huge internet debate about the sexually provocative, in Hall's opinion, "selfies" posted by young girls on her sons' Facebook pages. The pictures she's seen, says Hall, shows teenage girls in their pyjamas, not wearing their bras, or wearing just a towel. And "I can't help but notice the red-carpet pose, the extra-arched back, and the sultry pout …", she explains. She goes on — in that patronising teenspeak way kids really hate — "big bummer — we have to block your posts". Because "once a male sees you in a state of undress, he can't quickly un-see it … you don't want our boys to only think of you in this sexual way, do you? It's easy to see why the post was so explosive. Some of the comments — mostly the ones from Hall's fellow evangelical Christian mothers of boys — are supportive; the majority, unsurprisingly, especially from mothers of teenage girls like me, have been of outrage.