"I think that's a little silly. Hussie hasn't said anything about avoiding he/him pronouns, and clowngender is specifically about "not caring" and it's not a part of the binary so why would it imply transfemninity?"
Transitioning away from male is generally considered under the transfem umbrella, and regardless of whether or not hussie specifically is a woman, she HAS become a transfeminised individual because gender is ultimately a social class and social classes are best analysed through material conditions rather than vibes.
*Materially*, there is a pointed insistence on he/himing hussie primarily by bad actors. And while it's one thing when someone alternates pronouns, as most people on this forum do, it really sticks out when someone reads "any pronouns" and not only defaults consistently to the ones that match the persons AGAB, but is willing to argue against using anything else.
There IS a common transmisogynistic harassment tactic called degendering-- it applies when a she/her is consistently they/themed, and it applies when people pointedly default to masc pronouns when given literally infinite options.
(It's also not exactly uncommon for people doing this to hussie specifically to deny that hussie is trans/nb *at all*, and claim that it's All A Joke, which kind of damages my ability to give benefit of the doubt here)
you may not notice dog whistle behaviours like this, but they ring loud and clear to those of us with enough experience with transmisogynists.
again: no one is saying he/him isn't included under "any", or that andrew hussie is specifically a binary woman. we're saying it's weird when someone stubbornly and consistently ONLY uses he/him, and the way hussie has been treated since coming out mirrors the experiences of many transfems, binary or not.
(and i mean, as an aside: if hussie DID come out specifically as a woman, what then? will you all drop everything and change how you talk about her? does all of this retroactively count as Real transmisogyny to you then? maybe some of you, but i have a distinct feeling the people we're talking about might not.)