
French and British scientists are fighting over the existence of the female G-spot, the elusive cluster of internal nerve endings, after scientists from King’s College London claimed it didn’t exist.
A study from King’s College London, included 1,800 women, who were all twins (some identical, some not). The researchers believed if one identical twin reported having a G-spot, this would make it far more likely that her sister would give the same answer. But no such pattern emerged, suggesting the G-spot is a matter of the woman’s subjective opinion.
However, the results showed that the identical twins “were no more likely to share a G-spot than non-identical twins who share only half of their genes”.
This provoked a group of gynecologists to come together in Paris to discuss the topic and concluded the G-spot does exist in around 60 percent of women.
“The King’s College study…shows a lack of respect for what women say,” said Pierre Foldes, a leading French surgeon.
“The conclusions were completely erroneous because they were based solely on genetic observations and it is clear that in female sexuality there is a variability…It cannot be reduced to a ‘yes’ or ‘no’, or an ‘on’ or an ‘off.’”
In fact, conference organiser Sylvain Mimoun insisted that 60 per cent of women have a G-spot, and that the King’s College conclusions proved nothing more than the fact that the British were incapable of finding it.
Gynaecologist Odile Buisson went further by sating: “I don’t want to stigmatise at all but I think the Protestant, liberal, Anglo-Saxon character means you are very pragmatic. There has to be a cause for everything, a gene for everything. It’s totalitarian.”

