"On her Twitter account, Cardi wrote, "I can’t believe conservatives soo mad about WAP,"[33][50] and responded to an article stating that conservatives wanted the song banned by saying, "This is kinda iconic and I'm living for it."[51][52][53] For Rolling Stone, editor Charles Holmes wrote, "When the right wing gets mad about two women of color rapping about sex, it’s not a coincidence...four days after its initial release, 'WAP' has transformed from a supremely enjoyable Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion song into a symbol of something different, yet equally interesting", adding "contrary to popular belief, Republicans aren’t offended by the thought of sex...what they are furious about is the racial and economic make-up of who gets to enjoy and speak about sex".[54] Cassie Da Costa of The Daily Beast called Shapiro and Bradley's statements about the song "puritanical pearl-clutching", opining that they "constitute the kind of performative moral panics that are so baldly opportunistic as to render them banal".[55]
"Comedian Russell Brand posted a video to social media entitled "WAP: Feminist Masterpiece or Porn?", in which he discussed whether or not the song and accompanying video were truly empowering to women, asking whether women "achieve equality by aspiring to and replicating the values that have been established by males", calling the song "a sort of capitalist objectification and commodification of, in this case, the female.” He went on to compare the song's feminism to that of Margaret Thatcher, who he said was not a feminist as she was "extolling [and] espousing male values".[56][57] Brand received backlash for his comments online, and many social media users accused Brand of mansplaining feminism.[58][59][60] Writing for The Telegraph, Katie Glass called Brand a hypocrite for lecturing people on feminism in spite of being "a man who humiliated a woman who’d slept with him by taunting her grandfather about it on national radio...[and] who has joked about his sexual prowess," and for criticizing the video's supposed promotion of capitalism shortly after allegedly purchasing a $3 million mansion in Hollywood Hills and owning a £3.3 million home in Oxfordshire.[61]"