Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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None at all.
Answers on this thread will be biased, OP, since people who know transgendered people will jump at the change to show how worldly and accepting they are; and people who don't know any, which is to say the majority, will not bother to answer.
I bet you $1,000 you do know someone who is transgendered. You just don't realize it because he or she passes without question, and because his/her gender is totally irrelevant to your relationship.
Doubtful see post above--.3% of population...
If you live in an urban area and have a progressive group of friends, you are likely to have more trans acquiantances than others. I have one trans acquaintance who is an ex of a friend from high school and several trans friends/acquaintances from college. I totally acknowledge this is largely because I went to college at a very liberal SLAC (which drew lgbtq persons because there was a very accepting attitude) and I have lived in Portland and Berkeley.
All contact with minority groups depends on your peer group.
A "progressive" group of friends? Please tell us all what that is supposed to mean, other than you pick your friends based on their political beliefs
I'm not the PP, but the PP probably meant politically progressive, yes. Why is that worth mocking? Personal politics are important to a lot of people, and if something is really important to me (like not being a bigot), I'm not going to seek out friendships with people who believe otherwise. For example, I will probably lose friends over the course of this presidential election - not close friends, but people I know well and see fairly regularly - because of their support of Donald Trump.