I think it does. Having an inner sense of right and wrong is great, but it's not a convincing argument in the political arena. When pro-trans people say "Just let people be who they are," saying "That feels wrong to me" is not a very convincing response. But saying: "Drag kids and transgenderism in schools is part of an explicit plan to destroy the gender binary, the traditional family, and essentially the basis of Western civilization, and here are the advocates saying exactly that" is a much stronger argument.
I think it does. Having an inner sense of right and wrong is great, but it's not a convincing argument in the political arena. When pro-trans people say "Just let people be who they are," saying "That feels wrong to me" is not a very convincing response. But saying: "Drag kids and transgenderism in schools is part of an explicit plan to destroy the gender binary, the traditional family, and essentially the basis of Western civilization, and here are the advocates saying exactly that" is a much stronger argument.
Fair enough.