Fair enough.
I’d go one further, however. At a Serra Club luncheon I attended some years back, Cardinal George was asked why some dioceses and religious orders seem to be doing very well with vocations, while others can’t seem to get off the ground. He replied that in his estimation what these who are doing well had as a draw was a clarity of identity. And, with that clear witness and focus, people could understand what they were about unambiguously; with many being drawn to it. Perhaps this sense of understanding what the vocation is and is not, being proud of what it is, and not making any bones about it or hemming and hawing is that which serves the purpose of creating an attraction. In other words, a young man can find a certain nobility in following a path of dedicating his life to SOMETHING, something of worth and value. Absent this, or if things get mucked up and watered down, then what is in it for the man? He might as well find fulfillment elsewhere.
So, does “orthodoxy” attract? Yes. But primarily because in our day and age when the world around us is so confused, can’t find itself, and self-fulfillment is rampant, it stands as a clear contrast for something solid and worthwhile that an idealistic youth can have as a pillar of strength to stand with against the tide that would otherwise sweep him away into the vast ocean with the rest of the floating dead wood.