Is there any point to a GRC now?

Birth certificate and being treated as theoretically 'genuine' in law for all purposes, sure, which at this point is almost no purpose in law now of course because being a death merchant seeing trans people as not existing or not human is ok and all that.

Let's say some one even HAD two years of evidence, in the form of thousands of pages of documents to pick from. Would it be worth going on yet another centralised list that any future researcher could scrape from? And let's say said persons GP was the sort to say everything medical is a 'trans issue', no ADHD assessment is 'real' and that autistic people don't get the right to choose their provider, along with gems like 'attempted suicide by overdose' when no overdose attempt was ever made. Where on earth would a second medical report even come from, in a case like this to even get one granted, assuming said GP isn't even approachable to ask?

Let's assume this person already has passports, name, emails and benefits letters etc named correctly (literally everything else apart from a GRC).

Ofcourse getting a GRC before a first appointment at a Gender Clinic MIGHT theoretically be helpful, in the case of an NHS clinician wanting the person who is ADHD/ASD/mood dysregulated/undiagnosed but obvious C-PTSD which hasn't been supported because NHS MH services useless, to be "sure of their identity", though Id hope literally changing everything is evidence enough of that..... But then what is the NHS worth even at this point.

Would they like the legal recognition, sure. They would also like marriage equality, at least in theory... But would it stop stupid GPs being able to say every physical or mental health problem is "because TRANS DUH!" if it's granted?

Uh, asking for a friend ofcourse. 🫤

They don't know if they pass or not but they haven't been misgendered by random people for about a year now, so at least there's that.

Hypothetically what would the safest thing for this person be to do, get a GRC, or not get a GRC?