I think there are some deeply-seated biases which have been posited as givens, and apparently accepted as such, which acceptance is not warranted. In the past, it's been found that attitudes towards same-sex unions and attitudes towards transgender acceptance track each other extremely closely, which makes sense. According to the Pew Research Center's research, acceptance of same sex unions went from 2-1 disapproval in 2004 to 2-1 approval in 2019. Think about that. Without getting into the weeds of which groups changed and by how much, two factors tended to weigh heavily in the 1/3 holdouts - age and religion. I know that if you'd asked me 30 years ago, when I was in my mid-50s, what I thought about same-sex unions, I know it would be far different from today. Of course, I had to face it in my own family. In the intervening years, I've learned that I can relate to someone as they present themselves, without my mind going to what their private sex life might be like. It just doesn't occur to me. Now are we to assume that kids from the South and Midwest are that put off by transgenderism? Sure, they tend to be more conservative, and that factors in also, although less important than age or religion. Is it enough to materially affect recruiting. I don't buy it, personally. I think there's a lot of projection going on...