Madonna Slams Instagram For Removing Her Nu*e Pictures

24x7 Team

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Madonna Slams Instagram For Removing Her Nue Pictures

Madonna reacts after Instagram removed her explicit pictures.

Madonna had been trending recently after the 63-year-old pop star shared a series of explicit pictures on her social media. Madonna also exposed her ni**le in one of the pictures, where she’s wearing fishnet stockings over and under a bed. She was also trolled by 50 Cent, who shared a screenshot of her post with a caption, “”[Eyeball emoji] yo this is the funniest sh*t LOL [laughing emoji]. That’s Madonna under the bed trying to do like a virgin at 63. she shot out, if she don’t get her old a** up. LMFAO [crying laughing emojis].”

 

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Now the post has been removed by the social media platform Instagram, and the “Madame X” singer slams them with a repost. “The reason they gave my management that does not handle my account was that a small portion of my ni**le was exposed,” said Madonna. “It is still astounding to me that we live in a culture that allows every inch of a woman’s body to be shown except a ni**le. As if that is the only part of a woman’s anatomy that could be se*ualized.”

She continues, “The ni**le that nourishes the baby! Can’t a mans ni**le be experienced as ero*ic ??!! And what about a woman’s a** which is never censored anywhere. Giving thanks that I have managed to maintain my sanity through four decades of censorship…… se*ism……ageism and misogyny. Perfectly timed with the lies we have been raised to believe about the pilgrims peacefully breaking bread with the Native American Indians when they landed on Plymouth Rock! God bless America.”

Meta went on to say that nudity is not permitted on Facebook or Instagram for a variety of reasons, including issues about consent and the potential for cultural sensitivity to nu*ity. Meta’s nu*ity laws, on the other hand, have “evolved” through time. Meta now permits nu*ity in “a variety of scenarios, including nursing, acts of protest, paintings and sculptures, as well as educational and health contexts.”

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