Este sitio web fue traducido automáticamente. Para obtener más información, por favor haz clic aquí.
Updated

She made headlines for walking around the streets of New York topless and now Scout Willis has revealed why she did it. Us weekly reports that the 22-year-old daughter of Bruce Willis and Demi Moore penned an essay for Jane Pratt’s site xoJane to explain her semi-nude protest.

"Earlier last week I decided to do something kind of crazy," she wrote. "Instagram had recently deleted my account over what they called 'instances of abuse.' Which in reality amounted to a photo of myself in a sheer top and a post of a jacket I made featuring a picture of two close friends topless. For these instances of abuse, I was politely informed that I would no longer be welcome in the Instagram community."

Click here for more photos of Scout Willis.

"My situation was in no way unique; women are regularly kicked off Instagram for posting photos with any portion of the areola exposed, while photos sans nipple—degrading as they might be—remain unchallenged," she continued. "So I walked around New York topless and documented it on Twitter, pointing out that what is legal by New York state law is not allowed on Instagram."

Willis called the protest, "an opportunity for dialogue" and rued the fact that "unfortunately the emphasis in the press has been on sensationalizing my breasts, chiefly in terms of my family."

"There are also some people who would criticize my choice to relate nipples with equality at all. To me, nipples seem to be at the very heart of the issue. In the 1930s, men’s nipples were just as provocative, shameful, and taboo as women’s are now, and men were protesting in much the same way," Willis wrote.

"Men fought and they were heard, changing not only laws but social consciousness. And by 1936, men’s bare chests were accepted as the norm. So why is it that 80 years later women can’t seem to achieve the same for their chests? Why can’t a mother proudly breastfeed her child in public without feeling sexualized?… Why should I feel overly exposed because I choose not to wear a bra? Why would it be okay with Instagram and Facebook to allow photos of a cancer survivor who has had a double mastectomy and is without areolas but 'photos with fully exposed breasts, particularly if they’re unaffected by surgery, don’t follow Instagram’s Community Guidelines.'"

She concluded by saying that it should be, “a woman’s right to choose how she represents her body.”