He retweeted some stupid comment about a year or so ago when he was 16-17 about biology and transgenderism, but honestly since I work part-time in trans rights advocacy, it's not much different from what most people (including adults) think about transgender issues until they are exposed to more information regarding gender dysphoria and the science behind it. One skater had much more ardent and expressive tweets about it and she kept fighting with people online. I actually offered to have a private chat with her on twitter and she actually took me up on my offer and I found her to be a very honest, nice, and open person who was willing to listen to what I had to say and I in-turn made sure to listen to her as well.
IMO, if he keeps posting and defending those views, then I'll take it more seriously than him just needing to be exposed more to the issue. To me, as a big LGBTQ advocate/ally, being anti-trans is akin to someone being a disavowed racist, but I give people a bit of leeway at first just because often times people really don't know much about it and aren't really married to those views if they are open-minded and actually willing to study the subject and issues more. It's not like hard-line racism where IMO people really should know better by now considering where we are. Someone on another thread said it seems Vincent has become a bit more evolved on the issue.
He was also taken to task for attending the Olympic White House event and being used in a photo-op for Trump though Vincent never expressed any support for Trump. He just defended himself once about taking the opportunity to visit the White House and celebrate being an Olympian. Mirai Nagasu supported him on that even though she couldn't go. I think Zhou was the only U.S. figure skater to go to the WH, but many of them had the excuse that a SOI stop was going on at the same time elsewhere in the country.
He also seems sort of pro-gun, but I hadn't seen him post anything like that for a while and I think some people found maybe one or two tweets about it a year or so ago. My little brother used to be all into automatic weapons and stuff as a teen and then before he became college aged and after everything, he's now all for gun control. He also "liked" and supported some pro-me too posts and other progressive minded tweets as well, including those from Charlie White who was battling racists and sexists on Twitter. To me, I give teens a lot of leeway until it seems they are stubbornly married to a position and it's clear that's it for them (for now).
Now with the whole "shitty skaters" thing regarding skaters who did nothing but posted RIP-like messages about Coughlin (a person they knew) or just posted a black screen, the whole Eunsoo/Mariah thing, and other things including how some young fandom on Twitter seem cliquish and jump on the chance to "cancel" skaters they probably already dislike anyway (and who beat/rival the skaters who seem "in" with skating twitter community) and love to "educate" skaters like how one clearly teenaged Tweeter was so excited about educating Gabriella Papadakis regarding John Coughlin, etc. I'm careful not to jump on Twitter bandwagon campaigns trying to destroy the reputation of a skater.