"This is NOT a #ad, @maccosmetics is my daughter's favorite stores!" Jessica captioned the photo. "Mommy-Daughter Day with #MAXIDREW #girlygoth."
The final hashtag nods to Maxwell's plum-colored selection, but all told, it's pretty innocuous stuff. Yet where there's a will there's a way, and some of her followers still found ways to get mad.
"Her favorite store?? OMG," one person commented. "She should be playing outside or learning about the world not sitting in a chair putting on make up at MAC. What's wrong with you." "Great. Lovely toxins at a younger age," another said. "Isn't she too young for makeup?" another wondered.
On top of judging Jessica for letting her 5-year-old play with a lipstick and enter a makeup store, people also mom-shamed the singer for not choosing cruelty-free products. "Yes, kids deserve to know the truth about everything so they can make the right decisions," one person wrote. "I’m sure if her daughter knew that bunnies and other animals were hurt to make this makeup she wouldn’t like it so much..."
This is very far from the first time Jessica has been attacked for posting a picture with her children. On Halloween, when she shared a picture of her family's Halloween costumes—Jessica as Willie Nelson, her husband Eric as Waylon Jennings, her son Ace as a cowboy, and her daughter as Belle from Beauty and the Beast—her Instagram followers ripped her apart over the color of Maxwell's hair, which looked a little darker than usual in the photo. In June, when Jessica posted a picture of Maxwell posing in a child-sized bikini, some went so far as to suggest that the singer was distributing child pornography featuring her own daughter. (That photo has since been removed.)
But as they've done before, fans came to Jessica's defense on Wednesday: "Jealous people say negative things," one of her followers commented. "All they know to do in life is to put people down...if you don't like what she does don't follow an[d] don't comment...I think it is sweet an[d] cute that she spends time with her daughter no matter where they go or what they do."
"So glad to see you out with your daughter having a wonderful time with her," one user wrote. "I bet MaxiDrew just loves this."
There is no such thing as perfect parenting, as any of the parent commenters would likely agree. Maybe instead of criticizing a child, or wasting rage on a social media page, just click unfollow.