Precisely. TiMs will scream about oppressed they are, and claim that they are undergoing a genocide, but not realise how safe and protected they are (many of them are from European countries and the USA). They do not have to fight for access to education like Afghan women and girls are, their dignity and right to live safely like Hazara women, nor do they experience FGM or come from communities where baby girls are aborted or disowned by their families. They cannot handle being women and cope with everything the patriarchy subjects us to.
Re religious women's reaction, I think there is a mix of quiet shock and fear from religious women - especially in my community, where my female cousins just stopped going. I can only speak from my own experience, where lots of women I know say that they feel 'safer' by staying quiet, blending in and being invisible, because of past experiences where they were either targeted or attacked for speaking up. It's something that upsets me deeply, even though I understand where they are coming from.
My best friend, siblings and cousins know my views on TiMs and being GC. Thankfully they all agree (TiMs taking women's spaces angers my dad; he always worries for me, my sister and my cousins). Like me, they stay quiet at work and in public, because they know that they can't be forthright with their opinions. They won't just be accused of being transphobic, but are also afraid of any racist backlash they may experience, which would end their careers and jeopardise their safety