If you clicked on this article indignant about the headline, you can now relax: Kristina Kuzmic’s video about the reasons why women should never breastfeed in public is wholly sarcastic — and she makes it fairly obvious why anti-breastfeeding advocates have a silly argument.

Kuzmic, who is known for her wit and sarcasm, lays out the main reasons why people are against breastfeeding in public: Because it’s “offensive and inappropriate,” and breastfeeding covers aren’t guaranteed to give you full protection. She also notes sarcastically that “women who breastfeed in public aren’t doing it because their baby is actually hungry… They’re just trying to seduce your husbands.”

And the fourth reason? “We’re moms,” Kuzmic says. “I mean we don’t need to go out in public, we gave up that right when we started popping out babies. We don’t need to go shopping, or eat out, or have a social life.”

Her sarcasm hits on point and illuminates why anti-breastfeeding sentiments are often hypocritical. As Amber Hinds writes in the Huffington Post, if society continues to condemn mothers for breastfeeding in public, it may steer them away from breastfeeding completely — and turn to the easier, yet less healthy, option of infant formula.

“Breastfeeding is best, but if we don’t all support it — which means reacting to it no differently than we would react to the sight of a mother hugging her child — then there will continue to be women who are unable to meet their breastfeeding goals,” Hinds writes.

Whether or not you think breastfeeding in public is indecent, the health benefits are pretty clear. In a recent study, researchers found that breastfeeding an infant for over six months lowers their risk of childhood leukemia; breastfeeding also provides the child with a healthier gut microbiome. Breast milk has been linked to improved immune systems in babies as well as higher IQ. More and more, researchers are finding that the practice is good for the mothers, too — breastfeeding moms actually have a lower risk of recurring breast cancer, according to a recent study.