Dr. Fauci Suggests Nicki Minaj’s ‘Swollen Balls’ Vaccine Claim Is Just Plain Nuts

“There’s no evidence that it happens, nor is there any mechanistic reason to imagine that it would happen,” he told CNN’s Jake Tapper.

Dr. Anthony Fauci may be getting a little testy over Nicki Minaj’s false claim that the COVID-19 vaccine may cause a man’s testes to become swollen.

On Tuesday, CNN’s Jake Tapper asked the nation’s top infectious disease expert to respond to an anecdote Minaj shared on Twitter to explain why she hasn’t been vaccinated yet.

The hip-hop entertainer tweeted Monday that she planned to get a coronavirus shot once she does more research, but then shared an anecdote supposedly from a cousin in Trinidad who claimed that his friend’s testicles had become swollen after getting the vaccine.

Although many Twitter users chimed in to dispute Minaj’s ballsy ― and false ― claim, Tapper decided to get Fauci’s take on it. But he also felt obliged to explain why he was asking the doctor a question that he knew was ridiculous.

Tapper then asked Fauci if there was any evidence that the vaccines caused reproductive problems.

“The answer to that, Jake, is a resounding no,” Fauci said. There’s no evidence that it happens, nor is there any mechanistic reason to imagine that it would happen. So the answer to your question is no.”

Fauci then pointed out how difficult it is for officials to counter misinformation and disinformation like Minaj’s while trying not to attack her.

“These claims may be innocent on her part — I’m not blaming her for anything — but she should be thinking twice about propagating information that really has no basis except a one-off anecdote,” he said. “That’s not what science is all about.”

So far, Minaj hasn’t commented on Fauci’s comments, but, according to Mediaite, she has gotten in Twitter wars with, among others, MSNBC’s Joy Reid, Meghan McCain and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson.


Credit: Source link