Forget secret government warehouses holding alien spaceships – we’ve got a much more plausible conspiracy theory.
Social media is trying to ban motherhood.
Recently we have been a little overwhelmed by the number of stories that feature a mum having content removed from social media for little-to-no reason – and we’re calling ‘secret plot devised by social media networks to make mums feel bad, for what reason we’re not yet sure’.
Don’t believe us? Here’s the evidence:
Exhibit A:
Heather Bays is a mum and a professional photographer so she takes thousands of photos of her family. She shares all her favourites on her Instagram account and they are truly beautiful.
But when she posted this photo she was banned:
Heather started a #SaveHeatherBays campaign, and eventually her Instagram account was reinstated. But it was only deleted in the first place because eight people – yes, EIGHT – reported the above photo as being offensive. Seriously. You can read more here.
Exhibit B:
The reason this baby’s photo was banned from Faceboook is heartbreaking. Young mum Heather Walker shared photos of her late baby son Grayson on Facebook recently – her son had only lived for eight hours – and was appalled when the website removed them. Grayson had a fatal condition called anencephaly, which left parts of his brain and skull missing.
She and her friends reposted the photos, which saw them banned from the social networking site for 24 hours. You can read more here.
Exhibit C:
This mum forgot that Facebook has no tolerance for nudity – of any kind. A mum from North Carolina in the US posted a picture of her 2-year-old daughter Willa having her swimming bottoms being pulled down by a friend. The mum said she thought the photo was funny and cheeky.
Top Comments
I don't want to see pictures of anyone eating, regardless of age
Why oh why do people need to broadcast their life and their children's for everyone to see? Is it really that important to people to show everyone photos of their near naked kids? I realise some of these photos are quite innocent but the rules are there to protect children, but in case so what, even if the kid is fully clothed and facebook suddenly makes a rule that all photos of kids wearing green should be banned so what! In my day photos were to be shared with the people you loved, and the people you loved saw you in person. Even if your loved ones are living overseas you can still email them the photo if it is absolutely imperative to you that they get to see the colour of your kids knickers.