Most of us LGBTQ adults don't feel trans people are accepted: Polls | LGBTQ News

By comparison, about six out of 10 LGBTQ adults say that in the United States, homosexuals and lesbians are generally accepted.

A new poll conducted by the Pew Research Center found that trans people have less social acceptance in the United States than lesbian, homosexual or bisexual.

In the poll, six of about 10 adult LGBTQ participants said there was a “large amount” or “a considerable social acceptance” of homosexuals in the United States based on the “LGBTQ American experience” released Thursday.

For non-binary and transgender people, only about one-tenth of people say the same thing—about half say “not much” or don’t accept trans people at all.

After the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, 3,959 LGBTQ adults were investigated, but before he returned to office, he began a series of issues in questioning the existence of trans people and their social status.

On his first day of office, Trump signed an executive order calling on the administration to recognize men or women based on the “biological truth” of its future cells in conception, rejecting evidence and scientific arguments that gender is a scope.

Since then, Trump has banned trans women and girls from participating in women’s sports, pushed trans service personnel out of the military and tried to stop federal funding from providing gender-affirming care for trans people under the age of 19.

A poll conducted by the Associated Press News Center for Public Affairs Research in May found that about half of adults agree with Trump's way of dealing with transgender issues.

According to a Pew poll, trans people are less likely to be accepted by all family members than gay or lesbian adults. Most LGBTQ people say their siblings and friends accept them, although the rates are slightly higher among gay or lesbians.

About half of gay and lesbians say their parents did, and about one-third of trans people. Only one in 10 transgender people reported that their extended family accepted it, while about one in 10 of homosexuals or lesbians.

According to a Pew poll, about two-thirds of LGBTQ adults say the landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling legalized same-sex marriage nationwide on June 26, 2015, increasing acceptance of homosexual couples “more” or “more” or “more” acceptance of same-sex couples.

The Supreme Court is expected to rule in the coming weeks on whether Tennessee can conduct gender care for minors in the main situation of transgender communities.