Well, that's a load of nonsense. That's not information you're even privy to when you're just out on the street looking for someone to date. We're highly dependent on how someone presents themselves - a component of their gender - in feeling attraction to them. Any trans woman can tell you that being hit on by straight men is a regular occurrence in their lives whether or not it is wanted.Non.(And I think it's even more the case with sexual alignment. I'm in the camp that doesn't think there really is such a thing as homosexuality--or heterosexuality. There is no internal concept of being attracted to the same gender or the opposite gender. Rather, it makes much more sense if there is an attracted-to-males system and an attracted-to-females system. A model with one control being heterosexual/homosexual and one being intensity does a much poorer job of explaining bisexuality and asexuality than two independent systems, one for attracted to men and one for attracted to women, each with an intensity control.)
Nobody is attracted to the same "gender". People are attracted to zero, one, or both sexes.
Yeah, no. A man in a dress is a man in a dress.
New Research Shows a Vast Majority of Cis People Won't Date Trans People
Virtually all heterosexuals excluded trans folks from their dating pool: only 1.8% of straight women and 3.3% of straight men chose a trans person of either binary gender. But most non-heterosexuals weren’t down for dating a trans person either, with only 11.5% of gay men and 29% of lesbians being trans-inclusive in their dating preferences.