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Meghan McCain, Nicki Minaj

Meghan McCainhad sharp words forNicki Minaj— who had sharp words of her own for McCain — after Minaj stirred controversy while sharing her hesitancy about getting vaccinated againstCOVID-19.

“If I get vaccinated it won’t for the Met. It’ll be once I feel I’ve done enough research,” Minaj tweeted. “I’m working on that now. In the meantime my loves, be safe. Wear the mask with 2 strings that grips your head & face. Not that loose one.”

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“My cousin in Trinidad won’t get the vaccine cuz his friend got it & became impotent. His testicles became swollen,” she wrote. “His friend was weeks away from getting married, now the girl called off the wedding. So just pray on it & make sure you’re comfortable with ur decision, not bullied.”

Minaj also said Monday that she hadcontracted COVID-19while working on a music video shoot, telling a follower thatshe recommends vaccinationfor those who need it for their jobs — noting that she’ll probably get the vaccine herself in order to go on tour.

McCain, 36, later chimed in, quoting Minaj’s story about her cousin’s friend and tweeting, “That’s entirely enough internet for today,” before the singer responded to the conservative commentator with “eat s—.”

McCain then responded, criticizing what she called Minaj’s “irresponsible” tweets about the vaccine and its alleged side effects when the musician has such a large platform — 22.6 million Twitter followers.

“You have an enormous platform and have just spread unimaginable vaccine hesitancy to your fans,” McCain wrote. “Not only is it deeply irresponsible, it is very sad. I hope you talk to doctors and scientists like @ashishkjha like I did eventually. People are still dying from covid.”

In a sarcastic aside, McCain hashtagged#TeamCardiin an apparent reference tothe rappers' feud.

And in another tweet, she wrote, “I didn’t have a famous rapper losing her mind at me for not being an anti vaxxer on twitter on my 2021 bingo card, but here we are.”

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“It is just not true that getting the COVID-19 vaccine is associated with infertility in either males or females,” said Wen, who is an emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University.

Nicki Minaj.Paul Zimmerman/Getty

Rapper Nicki Minaj

“In fact, we know that there are actually consequences, if somebody gets COVID-19, in terms of the impact on the male reproductive system,” Wen added. “There have been studies that have linked scrotal discomfort and low sperm count to having COVID-19. In addition, there has been an association between scrotal swelling and congestion to having COVID-19. So, to emphasize, these are not associated with the vaccine but with the disease.”

Wen told PEOPLE that Minaj, as well as anyone who contracts COVID-19 before receiving the vaccine, can get their first dose as soon as their symptoms subside.

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source: people.com