The latest Gallup survey, from 2025, reveals alarming figures. As many as 23% of young Americans under the age of 30 identify as LGBT.
Among women aged 18 to 29, the figure is as high as 31.4%, while among men of the same age it is only 11.4%. Women thus appear in these statistics nearly three times as often as men, most of them identifying as bisexual.
This trend is not coincidental.
While young men of Generation Z are returning to more conservative views on many issues, young women are leaning overwhelmingly toward progressive ideologies, including the LGBT agenda.
Promises That Became a Trap
For decades, modern feminism has promised them liberation: freedom without obligations, identity without nature and happiness without sacrifice. The fourth wave of feminism has almost completely overlapped with the LGBT movement, shifting the emphasis from equal opportunity to a radical rejection of biological differences.
Instead of recognizing natural femininity, the power of motherhood and the unique role of women in the family, it offers a constant redefinition of the self. Femininity is no longer perceived as a gift, but as a supposed “limitation” that must be overcome.
Motherhood has come to be presented as an obstacle to a successful career, a traditional relationship with a man as a form of oppression and marriage as an outdated institution. Instead of valuing the complementarity between men and women, it promotes the idea that gender is merely a social construct and that identity is a purely personal choice.
The result is deeply paradoxical. Never in history have women had more freedom, access to education, career opportunities, rights and avenues for self-expression than they do today. And yet, they have never been so profoundly uncertain about their own identity.
They now doubt whether they are truly women, whether they want motherhood or whether their bodies correspond to their inner reality. The freedom that was supposed to bring fulfillment has instead brought an epidemic of insecurity, anxiety and the pursuit of the self through constant experimentation.
Feelings Instead of Reality
Contemporary culture teaches young people that the highest authority is not objective reality, but subjective feeling. “How I feel” has become the primary criterion for identity, truth and morality. Women, in particular, are naturally more sensitive to relationships, emotional experience, social acceptance and the judgment of those around them. In a healthy context, this natural sensitivity is a great strength. In today’s culture, however, it is being turned into a vulnerability.
When identity ceases to be based on biological reality, on chromosomes, hormones, physiology and evolutionary differences between the sexes, and begins to be built exclusively on momentary feelings, it opens up a wide space for experimentation with both sexuality and gender identity. What was clear yesterday becomes “fluid” today.
Feminism and gender ideology have significantly accelerated this process. For decades, young women have been repeatedly told that their bodies, fertility, maternal instinct and natural complementarity with men are things to be overcome, suppressed or “deconstructed”. Femininity is no longer perceived as a gift, but as a burden to be cast off.
The LGBT movement has merely brought this “liberating” logic to its conclusion. It offers the illusion of freedom from all natural boundaries and roles, but in practice it brings inner turmoil, growing loneliness, mental health issues and the rejection of one of the greatest gifts of a woman’s life: motherhood. Instead of deep fulfillment in natural relationships, it offers an endless search for the self and its constant redefinition.

The Nature of Femininity and Its Value
Femininity is not a social construct that can be reshaped at will. It is a biological, psychological and evolutionary reality with clear characteristics, from chromosomes and hormones to a distinct way of thinking and the unique ability to give birth to and raise children.
Psychological and sociological studies have long shown that, on average, women are better at empathy, nurturing relationships and making long-term investments in children. This complementarity with men is not a sign of oppression, but the foundation of stable families and a healthy society.
When modern feminism spends decades attacking these natural differences and labeling them “toxic stereotypes”, it creates a deep inner conflict among young women.
Instead of accepting their nature, it teaches them to see it as something to be overcome or “deconstructed”. The result is growing insecurity, higher rates of anxiety and depression, and a search for identity through constant experimentation.
The Way Back
This trend is not a sign of greater freedom, but of a profound cultural and anthropological crisis. A society that elevates subjective feelings above biological reality and individualism above responsibility deprives the younger generation of the joy of natural fulfillment.
Young women deserve a better message than “be whatever you want to be”. They deserve to hear the truth: that their womanhood has value in and of itself, that motherhood is one of the most significant human vocations and that a stable relationship with a man is a source of security and long-term happiness for both parties.
The answer must be clear and objective: there is no need to doubt one’s own femininity. We must return to recognizing biological reality, the psychological differences between the sexes and the practical benefits of the traditional family model. Countries and cultures that respect these differences have consistently shown higher levels of stability, fertility and mental health.
Only when society stops telling young women that their nature is a problem and begins to value it once again can the new generation find true self-confidence – not in the constant redefinition of identity, but in accepting who they objectively are.