
(She's an actor who says she'd change her body for any role. On Wednesday the Keeping Up With the Kardashians star used her verified Instagram account to post videos and a photo of herself along with a statement which began Hey guys, this is me and my.

(She just wanted to improve her sleep and hydration.) Just like Bridgerton's Nicola Coughlan shouldn't be strong-armed into being a body-positivity activist. She shouldn't be forced to like a photo of herself, just like Lizzo shouldn't be criticized for going on a 10-day juice cleanse. Do we need Khloé Kardashian leading that charge? No, not if she doesn't want to.

What it comes down to is this: Do we need more body diversity on Instagram? Yes. I, for one, would be mortified if a photo of myself I didn't like started making the rounds-even if everyone else was praising it. For some, that's unfiltered for others, it's not. They have every right to do that, just like we have every right to post only pics of ourselves that we choose. I don't know Kardashian personally, so I won't speculate why, but it doesn't take much to realize she and her sisters like curating and stylizing their content. Khloe Kardashians Unedited Bikini Photo Is Being Removed After The Unauthorised Picture Was Leaked. Social media is hellbent on Kardashian being a certain type of body-acceptance role model-and the fact of the matter is she's not. But, unlike the perfectly airbrushed photo of her older sister, Kim Kardashian, that truly made the ether explode back in 2014, the recent photo of Khloé was unedited, unfiltered and unapproved by. But as many praised the natural-looking picture as. All the “You go, girl! Love this pic of yourself!” discourse is hollow if the girl in question didn't post the pic in question. KHLOE Kardashian's unedited bikini snap has circulated the internet after its accidental release by a member of her team this weekend.

For whatever reason Kardashian doesn't want this pic out there, and that's enough to end this conversation. But there's something more important than that: a right to privacy-and a right to decide what photos of ourselves we're comfortable with letting the world see.
