I voted but have a hard time characterizing the thought and feelings of people whose life experience is very different from mine. I can see both choices being true for people.
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It seems to me that it *should* be "more", but in fact "less" seems to be more prevalent. Memeplexes are weird like that.
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I think "less", but only because you specified a "strong" supporter. Someone who believed men and women have similar experiences is likely to have a meh attitude towards genderfluidity, just like libertarians had towards same-sex marriage.
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Supporter here; voted "less". Rather than "strong supporter", I would ask 2 questions; 1) for non-binary people(but probably incl binary trans too), and 2) cis people who don't have the same frame of reference and sometimes write political desires into their assumptions.
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Context-dependent. Likely to nod along with either as long as speaker is making an argument for their politics, and attack mercilessly otherwise.
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If they agree to the premise, then there is no need for a distinction in gender. Supporting gender change and recognition of the allegedly changed gender requires distinction in gender.
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"There is no need for a distinction in gender" does not conflict with "society as it currently (and imperfectly) exists treats people differently depending on their gender presentation"
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