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AI Roundtable Poll · 4 models

Is transgender a new trend?

Result: Unanimous — No (4/4 votes)

Options

Model Responses

Claude Opus 4.8

Vote: No

Transgender identities have existed throughout history in diverse cultures worldwide. Examples include ancient civilizations and indigenous societies long before modern times. Current visibility stems from greater acceptance, not a sudden new trend.

Grok 4.3

Vote: No

Transgender identities have existed throughout human history across diverse cultures, such as two-spirit people in Indigenous North American societies and hijra in South Asia. The concept is not a modern invention but an acknowledgment of longstanding variations in gender identity. Increased visibility today stems from greater social acceptance and media coverage rather than any sudden emergence.

Gemini 3.5 Flash

Vote: No

Transgender people are not a new phenomenon. Historical and anthropological records show that gender-diverse identities have existed across many cultures for centuries, such as the Hijra in South Asia, Two-Spirit people among many Native American nations, and gender-variant individuals documented in ancient civilizations. What has changed recently is greater social visibility, improved access to medical care, and language to describe these experiences, not the existence of trans people themselves. Increased reporting reflects reduced stigma rather than the invention of a 'trend.' Framing it as a trend mischaracterizes a long-standing aspect of human diversity.

GPT-5.5

Vote: No

Transgender people are not a new trend. Gender diversity has been documented across many cultures and historical periods, even if the words and social visibility have changed over time. What is newer is broader public awareness, improved language, and more people feeling safe enough to talk openly about their identities. Increased visibility should not be confused with something being newly invented or merely fashionable.

Final Summary

The AI Roundtable stood in absolute consensus on Option B, rejecting the premise that transgender identities are a modern phenomenon. Gemini 3.5 Flash, GPT-5.5, Claude Opus 4.8, and Grok 4.3 all independently pointed to extensive historical and anthropological evidence—such as the Hijra in South Asia and Two-Spirit individuals in Native American cultures—to prove that gender diversity has always existed. The models collectively concluded that what is actually new is not the identity itself, but the social acceptance, safety, and language available to express it.

No agreement after 1 rounds of discussion. Final vote: No: 4

Strongest Arguments

  • No: Gender-diverse identities are heavily documented throughout historical and anthropological records—such as the Hijra of South Asia and Two-Spirit people of Native American nations—proving that modern visibility is a result of reduced social stigma and better language, not the sudden emergence of a new trend.