I will use they/them depending on context, audience, and clarity
Losing the ability to distinguish between singular and plural does not ever aid in clarity. It happens constantly when you're talking about trannies on MatI: you're referring to a group of people (Cogent, WPath, Google, etc.) while also talking about Keffals or Liz Fong-Jones, but you use "they" for both. It becomes literally impossible to know which pronouns are for whom in this scenario. Since you stopped using singular "they" so frequently, this issue has gone away. The argument that it sounds weird to call someone named Liz "he" is ridiculous, because what if his name really was Liz, given at birth? Would you still call him "they?" What about a man name Sue, or Ashley? Somehow I don't think you'd be saying the same thing.
It's much easier to mentally attach "Liz" to "they" because they/them have been in English as gender neutral pronouns since Shakespeare.
This is retarded troon propaganda and I do not understand why you repeat it. "They" is not and has never been a singular pronoun and it never will be, nor can it be. You will never ever find any example of Shakespeare, under any circumstances, using "they" to refer to an individual of known gender, as in, "Liz Fong-Jones is a true and honest woman who cut off their dick." In fact you will never find any author doing this before about 2010 even when gender was unknown; we used to write "he or she." I'm younger than you, and if I had done this in grade school, my teachers would have beaten me.
Also, Shakespeare is not the ultimate authority on good English, was writing 500 years ago, is mostly compiled out of fake versions written after his death, consists entirely of dialogue and of characters of varying social statuses who sometimes make intentional grammatical errors, and has been repunctuated and redrafted at least three times before coming down to us in what we think of as "Shakespeare," so it would be a stupid argument even if it were true.
When a singular "they" is/was traditionally used in English, it was
always paired with the word like
someone,
anyone, whoever. Shakespeare did use it in this sense, like most people do. It's sloppy but acceptable in this scenario because these words can be plural or singular, and the identity is always unknown. "He or she" is still better. A lot of authors used to say that you should just use "he" for everything, but grammarians have argued over that for centuries.
"They" isn't just a funny word that lets you obscure sex. It's our fundamental linguistic tool for differentiating between singular and plural nouns. It is part of the bedrock of our language. Trannies intentionally have tried to steal it from us in order to dumb us down, which is basically their entire MO. This is blindingly obvious.