By Mark Antonio Wright
Tuesday, October 14, 2025
Eric Kaufmann, writing for Unherd, published a fascinating piece
this morning detailing new data showing a sharp reduction of young Americans
identifying as “trans” or “queer” since 2023.
Kaufmann, who is a professor of politics at the U.K.’s
University of Buckingham, studied several sets of data and found
that trends that seemed inexorable during the Great Awokening a few short years
ago have surprisingly reversed themselves.
The Foundation for Individual
Rights and Expression (FIRE), which conducts a large annual survey of US
undergraduates, polled over 60,000 students in 2025. My analysis of the raw data shows that in that year,
just 3.6% of respondents identified as a gender other than male or female. By
comparison, the figure was 5.2% in 2024 and 6.8% in both 2022 and 2023. In
other words, the share of trans-identified students has effectively halved in
just two years.
This trend is especially marked
in elite institutions. Andover Phillips Academy in suburban Boston surveys over
three-quarters of its students annually. In 2023, 9.2%
identified as neither male nor female. This year, that number has crashed to
just 3%. A similar story emerges at Brown University: 5% of students identified
as non-binary in 2022 and 2023, but by 2025 that share had dropped to 2.6%.
You can see the decline charted in Kaufmann’s tweet here.
So what’s causing all this? It’s hard to say. According
to the Pew Research Center, social-media usage rates among young people have
been stable. And Kaufmann writes that the so-called vibe shift does not appear
to be a major factor because young people’s religiosity and political ideology
have seen little change over the period. “Trans and queer identification have
declined among young Americans even as levels of wokeness and irreligion have
not,” Kaufmann writes.
What does seem to have made some difference is the
decline in the levels of depression and other mental-health problems in the
post-pandemic period. “My analysis,” Kaufmann writes, “indicates that changes
in mental health over time, especially depression, made a significant
difference to the trajectory of trans and queer identities over this period.”
However, “the drop in mental health issues encompassed
all social groups, including trans and queer youth,” continued Kaufmann. “The
post-pandemic decline in mental illness did not immediately trigger a drop in
sexual and gender nonconformity; that shift came a year or two later,
suggesting other forces are also at work.”
Indeed, a possible explanation, according to Kaufmann, is
that the trans-identity boom was a passing trend — or a “fashion” in his
assessment — that is now receding.
For a while, during the Great Awokening, trans issues
were everywhere. They became cool to many young people. They have now become
simply uncool through oversaturation. Like bell bottoms after the ’70s, we may
have reached peak trans.
No comments:
Post a Comment