Fighting Machismo with Minis in Mexico

Miniskirts were in full effect at Mexico City's "Slut Walk" to protest machismo.<br clear="all">   (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Marchers dressed to the nines to underscore their message: What a woman wears isn't a provocation for aggression. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Marchers wore cocktail dresses, lace stockings and heels to underscore their message: What a woman wears isn't a provocation for aggression. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Demonstrators also voiced anger about the many unsolved crimes against women. A woman wears a T-shirt with the "No More Blood" emblem, which has become a unifying call against violence in Mexico. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

(left to right) Cristina Rosas, 29, and Veronica Martínez, 13, and her 35-year-old mother, also Veronica Martinez march in cowboy hats and short shorts. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Veronica Martínez, 35, and her 13-year-old daughter joined in the protest. "We're demanding respect from men," said the elder Martínez. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Protesters tattooed "No is no!" in lipstick on their legs and arms. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Men participated in the protest, as well—including a handful of men wearing pig masks. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

"If being happy, free and dressing like I want is being a slut, then, yes I'm very slutty...No is no." Women and men marching in Mexico City's "Slut Walk" to protest machismo culture wore stickers and carried placards with their message. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

"She says... No is no!" Women and men marching in Mexico City's "Slut Walk" to protest machismo culture wore stickers and carried placards with their message. (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)

Hundreds of people marched along Mexico City's Reforma Avenue as part of the "Slut Walk." (Lauren Villagran/Fox News Latino)