She continues, “[Their] proclamations are steeped in wicked, ridiculous, damaged notions of what Black children’s hair should look like—particularly that of Black girls. I can’t help but to think that it’s tied into our equally wicked, ridiculous, damaged notions about Black girls’ bodies. We need them to be tamed. We need them to be restrained. Wild and free and natural is a no-go. The Internet, then, becomes just another tool in the policeman’s arsenal, another way to keep Black girls and Black mothers in our place.”