I don't know about that subject specifically, because I haven't researched it, but whenever you see polarizing issues—and the trans issue, whatever else is true, is definitely an issue that I think speaks to many people in ways that are quite urgent—you always have the capacity for misrepresentation and bad-faith conflict. That creates a scheme to capture attention really on both sides of that issue, so you have a process that should be, I think, fairly sober, “medicalized”, and serious becoming something that's very highly hyper-politicized, and that's a feature of social media writ large.
So I wouldn't be surprised to find vast anti-trans campaigns parading around these places that are speaking to different adversarial groups or even other kind of hyper-ideological gender activism, on the other side, that's affiliated with revolutionary ideology and all the rest of it.
That's an example of how what should be a sober, serious conversation that is not pleasant for the people who are involved in it, I'm sure, becomes something that primarily assumes the responsibility of a public spectacle.