In a truly stunning new claim about why federal agents raided his Florida home, Donald Trump floated the idea that they might have been looking for Hillary Clinton’s emails. Speaking to Fox News host Sean Hannity Wednesday night, the former president mentioned his wild theory alongside the unhinged claim that he was able to declassify documents just by “thinking about it.” “There’s also a lot of speculation, because of the severity of what they did, the severity of the FBI coming and raiding Mar-a-Lago,” Trump said, referring to the search last month amid claims Trump had improperly retained sensitive documents. “Were they looking for the Hillary Clinton emails that were deleted, but they are around someplace?” Even Hannity seemed surprised by the comment, asking Trump if he was saying he had the emails. “No,” Trump answered, “They may be saying… They may have thought that it was in there. And a lot of people said the only thing that would give the kind of severity that they showed by actually coming in and raiding with many, many people is the Hillary Clinton deal, the Russia, Russia, Russia stuff, or… I mean there are a number of things. The spying on Trump’s campaign.”
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Introduction Squirting is the involuntary expulsion of fluid from the female urethra following stimulation of the anterior vaginal wall before or during orgasm. The mechanism underlying squirting has not been established.
Purpose To elucidate the mechanism of squirting.
Methods The subjects in the current study were women who were able to squirt. They were not sex workers. A urethral catheter was inserted before sexual stimulation and the bladder was emptied. Then, a mixture of indigo carmine (10 ml) and saline (40 ml) was injected into the bladder. Sexual stimulation was provided to facilitate squirting, which was videotaped and verified. The secretions were collected in sterile cups, and prostate specific antigen (PSA) and glucose levels were measured.
Results Five women (2 in the 30s, 2 in the 40s, and 1 in the 50s) participated in this study. All women were able to squirt; three squirted only with manual sexual stimulation and two with penetrative sexual stimulation. The discharged fluid was blue in all cases, confirming the bladder as the source. The fluid was PSA-positive in four patients.
Conclusions The main component of squirt fluid is urine, but may also contain fluid from Skene's glands (female prostate). This is the first report in which visualization of squirting was enhanced.
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