Breastfeeding Advocates Protest Facebook With Nurse-In

Courtesy Paala Secor
A group of moms protested outside Facebook offices around the world Monday charging that the social network has repeatedly taken down photos that show mothers breastfeeding their babies.

The site even disabled the accounts of some moms who had uploaded the nursing pictures, the group said.

"A woman is protected to breastfeed her child wherever she is legally allowed," said Emma Kwasnica, a mid-wife and breastfeeding advocate who helped spearhead the nurse-in. "Health experts are always pushing women to breastfeed, but we're constantly seeing road blocks like this."

Kwasnica implored Facebook to train their staff to better decipher what is and what isn't appropriate. She also asked that the social networking giant build stronger ties to their clients, so that there is a point of contact for clients in case errors such as these continue to arise.

Breastfeeding photos are allowed to be uploaded to the social networking site, but if another Facebook user flags a photo as inappropriate, it may be taken down, according to a company spokesperson.

In the course of processing more than one billion photos per day, employees are bound to make a mistake once in a while, when it comes to determining what is and is not appropriate, Facebook said.

Kwasnica said dozens of her photos have been flagged since she joined Facebook in 2007. Her personal page has been disabled four times due to the breastfeeding pictures.

A spokesperson for the site said Facebook is glad that mothers and their families, including many who work at Facebook, use the site to share their parenting experiences, including breastfeeding their children.

"By uploading photos, joining groups, and engaging with different organizations, these families are able to share and connect on a very important topic, and we are thrilled they are using Facebook to do so," a Facebook spokesperson said. "When it comes to uploaded photos on Facebook, the vast majority of breastfeeding photos comply with our Statement of Rights and Responsibilities, which closely mirrors the policy that governs broadcast television.

"Facebook receives hundreds of thousands of reports every week, and as you might expect, occasionally we make a mistake and remove a piece of content we shouldn't," the company said.

When this happens, employees at the social network quickly work to address an error by apologizing to those affected and making any necessary changes to the processes to ensure the same type of mistakes do not continue to be made, the company said. The site encourages people to re-upload the photos they believe were removed in error.

But, Kwasnica said she receives messages nearly every day from other mothers who have been blocked or suspended from Facebook due to their breastfeeding photos.

"If it is truly because of employee errors, it happens so much that it seems that Facebook has lost control of its network," said Kwasnica.

Health organizations have long encouraged mothers to breastfeed their newborn babies. Breast milk provides antibodies against pathogens, and has been associated with reduced morbidity and mortality from gastrointestinal, respiratory and other diseases.

Health experts agree that "breast is best" for growing infants. About 75 percent of new moms in the U.S. start breastfeeding their newborns, but only about 13 percent continue to breastfeed after the baby is six months old, according to the CDC.

"I don't see Facebook taking down photos of anyone else eating in public," said Susan Burger, president of the New York Lactation Consultant Association. "People need to start realizing that babies need to eat in the normal way that they were supposed to eat. No one else is expected to eat under a blanket or in a bathroom or only at home… Of all the members of society that one could harass, why would anyone want to harass babies and the mothers who are caring for them?"

And most of the time, a woman's nipple and areola are not exposed when breastfeeding her child, said Dr. Ruth Lawrence, director of the Human Lactation Study Center at the University of Rochester School of Medicine.

"One sees more of the breast with present day fashions than when a baby is suckling," said Lawrence. "If this is nudity, then there is nudity everywhere, on the street, on TV and online. Children should grow up knowing breastfeeding is normal, natural, and essential to infant care."

Dr. Kathleen Marinelli, a physician at Connecticut Children's Medical Center, agreed and said society is much more comfortable allowing marketing companies to use breasts to sell beers and cars than seeing a woman using her breasts in their most natural and functioning form.

"It's a very convoluted way of seeing things," said Marinelli. "We need not sexualize breasts and see them in their natural form. I think Facebook pictures of women breastfeeding would help normalize this perception."

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30 comments

  • dontsassme  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  2 months ago
    No one is saying that women shouldn't breastfeed or that it is not good for the baby. The focus is on public display of breastfeeding. I breastfed, but in privacy. At home, in public restrooms, in my car covered with a blanket, (always discreetly). I am against public breastfeeding unless it is a true emergency. Then I would accept it only if the mother covered herself and the child with a receiving blanket or some other cloth. There are very few, if any, true emergencies that require this event in public. Receiving blankets are thin and lightweight. When babies are taken out in the bright sun or cold weather, mothers ususally cover their babies heads anyway, and the baby breathes just fine. If you're going out with your infant, pump a couple of bottles of breastmilk first and prepare for the event, as you would prepare for any other outing. If you go camping, you take a tent and emergency kit. If you go shopping, you take money and id with you. If you take an infant out, you pump breast milk at home and take a thermos with bottles filled with that milk. Breastfeeding is nothing to be ashamed of, nor is it anything to be prideful of.
  • sherry b  •  3 months ago
    Breastfeeding is one thing but you aren't feeding at the time your picture is on Facebook.Thats just for looking..And while a breast is for nourishment not sexual could it not also be said that a vagina is for birthing, not sexual and therefore can be exposed and photographed for public viewing? So now women can show off the #$%$ and the #$%$ at the same time..Now start screaming "Its natural,its my right"... I nursed my children, in public I was ALWAYS covered and very discreet, it is natural but it is personal as well and should be kept that way..
    • bunny 3 months ago
      Yes, you #$%$ Because just like a baby nurses up to 15 times a day....women also need to give birth up to 10-15 times a day. You must subscribe to FOX news logic. LOLOL!
    • bunny 3 months ago
      You eat and look how you want, and my baby and I will do the same...K?
    • sherry b 3 months ago
      15 times a day? Good heavens woman what are you nursing a baby or a sponge? You got to be sucked dry as a bone..
  • Brandy  •  3 months ago
    I have nothing against breastfeeding did it myself but when in public please do so covered. I don't need or want to see your breast or anything else and it is inappropriate when children are present.
    • bunny 3 months ago
      Get Real. Protect the children? Children are the ones who drink the milk. I guess we should blindfold them to appease Miss Brandy's puritanical obsessions.
    • Brandy 3 months ago
      Hey Bunny did you grow up with no morals? I don't want to see your tit and I sure don't want my children seeing it. Cover your stuff up its that simple have some respect for other people if you are out in public its not all about YOU!
    • Brandy 3 months ago
      Perhaps its your age that makes you so immature and rude but with a name like Bunny I shouldn't be surprised!
  • Donna  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  3 months ago
    Breastfeeding is a beautiful thing and I nursed two children. But why do women feel the need to post pictures of themselves nursing? TMI!
    • bunny 3 months ago
      The same reason anyone decides to post any picture about anything. Why are bf pics TMI but other pics aren't? Lots of people post pictures of food and what they are eating.
    • DOE JANE 3 months ago
      Donna--great comment, too bad that a lot of other exhibitionist women could see it.
  • Jennifer  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  3 months ago
    I majorly support brestfeeding. I breastfed both of my children. I see no reason for people to post breastfeeding pictures on FB. I do support mothers who choose to breastfeed in public, because babies have to eat, but your baby does not need to have pictures of it eating on FB. You can verbally endorse breastfeeding, you don't need to post pictures to prove to the world you are doing it.
  • Cherrie  •  Ruston, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
    Bunny, I sure hate to tell you this, but you are not the only person that matters. Breastfeed your child. Take all the pictures you want. Enjoy them. But, please don't think for a minute that people really want to see. Trust me when I tell you, we don't. Your "in your face" attitude with both your words and the pictures you are so adament about about shows everyone here that you are rude, ugly, and completely selfish. I wonder what it is that you are seeking by needing to garner attention to yourself in such a manner. Believe me, discretion is a virtue. When you show respect to fellow man, you in turn earn respect back.
    • DOE JANE 3 months ago
      Cherrie--I believe that Bunny rabbit has met her match....
  • Jr Rice  •  3 months ago
    Breastfeeding and POSTING pics are two different issues. I support breast feeding, but if you are concerned about the pics, then are you MORE worried about the ACTUAL breastfeeding, OR SETTING SOMEBODY UP FOR YOUR PERSONAL GAIN? Seriously..... How does Facebook prevent you from FEEDING?
  • Chingaso  •  3 months ago
    But the person being breastfed was a 35 year old dude!
  • ruth  •  3 months ago
    I am not against breastfeeding, but I fail to to see what the objective is, when women want to publish pictures of themselves for the world to see! Seems like it is more appropriate to have that beautiful, private moment with your child and not use it as some kind of 'advertising'.
  • Bob  •  Akron, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    Dont you #$%$ have anything better to do ?
  • spindrift  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 months ago
    Hey "breastfeeding moms" stop bidding for attention, no one wants to look at your ugly floppy hooters. Feed your babies quietly in private and STFU. Idiots.
  • Seth  •  3 months ago
    You breeders have no modesty. You are exhibitionists who get a thrill from exposing yourselves. Stop behaving like monkeys and be discrete.
  • SouthernGirl  •  3 months ago
    Frankly, I fail to see WHY so many nursing women want to post photos of themselves breastfeeding. Sure, it's a natural act, but so is throwing up, and I don't see anybody rushing to post pictures of themselves engaged in that act.
  • Power Player  •  3 months ago
    The vast majority of breastfeeding women are discrete. They are not out to push their boobs into other people's lives. These "mothers" are real boobs.
  • DOE JANE  •  3 months ago
    Have any of you seen these pictures that these women are talking about? I have and I have seen the one that Kwasnica is talking about and it is disgusting and has no business being posted on facebook. Why would any female with any decency at all want to photograph pictures like this and have the whole world look at them? Because it is natural, Because they can, Because they have a right and the rest of the world doesn't have any rights. Even facebook in their opinion doesn't have any rights. My Rights--My Rights--My Rights. What about the rights of the rest of the world that doesn't appreciate your porn. One of the pictures had a woman with no clothes on to the waist. A child was hanging on one side and she had a breast pump on the other side and was looking up at the camera grinning as if to say, look at me, I can do this, I have a right, it is natural, you can't tell me what to do. Disgusting. They say that their mothers are discreet. No--the ones that I have seen are not discreet. The pictures at the protests are not all discreet. A lot of women have ceased to be ladies and that is a shame.
  • Jamie  •  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    i wish these mothers would understand that there are sick people out in this world that get off to stuff like that, I see it as if you want to breastfeed your child go ahead, but not everyone wants to see you doing it.
  • Robert  •  Riceville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
    I think that if all these women that want to post their pictures of their babies sucking on their boobs have such a problem with FaceBook policies, they can take their accounts somewhere else, like maybe MySpace or post the videos on YouTube (rhymes with MyBoob)!!!
  • RandyO  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  3 months ago
    If anyone out there has a problem with photos of nursing moms, then don't look at them.
  • Zakiya  •  Thomasville, Georgia  •  3 months ago
    Of all the nasty--drug filled, sexually explicit photos I constantly see on facebook but the only ones that they take down are breastfeeding photos? Really?
  • Jackson  •  Tucson, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    These people need a life......