I do not think the question itself is too broad. An answer could be provided in 5-10 paragraphs of explanation which in my book means it's perfectly answerable as is.
But, what makes questions like this harder to answer is that there are some basic misconceptions expressed in the question and answering your question requires enough explanation to first dispel and explain the parts of the question itself that are wrong and then focus on answering the underlying question. This tends to frustrate people trying to answer because the question itself has faults. And, when you frustrate people trying to answer by providing a flawed question, you may get downvotes or closevotes, whether the downvoting or closevoting reason is perfectly aligned with why a question should be closed or not.
The flaws do make the question seem a bit unfocused because you're not focusing the question on the proper issues and some other things have to also be explained in order to write a decent answer.
The (somewhat obvious, but not always easy to do) answer here is to write better questions that don't frustrate people who are trying to answer your question.
What I think probably put people off is this:
I recently read somewhere that HTTPS requests are only encrypted in transit (as opposed to end-to-end) in order to prevent MITM attacks, which seems to imply that they are unencrypted on the ends themselves.
HTTPS is end-to-end encrypted. It's encrypted from when it leaves the browser to when it is delivered to the server's code (that's end-to-end). Thus, it is also encrypted in transit.
So, the question is very confused about this.
If this is true, it would mean that the user is able to see them on the client-side, making data sent to them insecure.
Then, this is also confused. All data that exists on the client-side is potentially viewable by the user (with a small amount of coding skill). The entire client-side is insecure from the client itself. That is just a truism of the client-server architecture. So, the notion that you could merge in some data with your client-side code and that data could never be viewable by the client is just misguided.
In your client, the data sits in some user-visible form in plain text. Then, the user carries out some action to submit the data to the server. Your client-side code receives the data in plain text, merges in some more data in plain text and then calls some function to initiate the https request. Up to now all the data is being managed by your client-side code and it's all in plain text. A coder of moderate skill with access to the client could follow what was happening.
When the function is called to make an https request, the underlying code established the https connection to the server and this includes negotiating encryption mechanisms. The data is then encrypted (before it leaves your client-side process) and the data is sent over TCP to the server fully encrypted.
It's not viewable by anyone on the network or even in the local OS because it is end-to-end encrypted.
But, while the data was being assembled in the client (before the https request was sent), it was viewable by anyone with access to your client and some coding/hacking skills.