It does in the context of people delusionally catastrophising that any minute the woke mob are going force medicine degrees to teach treating malaria cases by waving chickens and Coca-cola bottles over the patient.
It hasn't reached that, but when you have the Smithsonian itself stating stuff like "objectivity" and "rational thinking" are associated with "whiteness," sometimes the Coke is looking a bit appealing.
Then of course the perhaps more political aspect, where certain people don't want us to think about stuff like how science was used to promote racism. And one of the ways they do that is to pretend anyone wanting to "decolonise science" is trying to make us believe that witch-doctors can cause lightning strikes.
The first part is a non-sequitur. Science has been used for all manner of horrible things. That does include racism, but includes everything else, from weapons, to simply misguided beliefs (e.g. that cholera was caused by polluted air, not polluted water). The people who designed the pyramids were brilliant scientists, but the labourers who had to spend years on end building them might have found this cold comfort.
Second, it's not far off, because I've seen intelligent design (let's call it what it is) try to be smuggled in under this kind of guise. People can believe what they want to believe, but if one's approach to "decolonizing" science is to promote myth as being on par, then we're running into trouble.
There is another general sense in that the world is just so full of information, much of which is bluster and bullshit. So do you want to be the sort of person furthering global wisdom, or do you want to be the sort of person who assists every last bit of clickbaity nonsense they can find on 4chan and Reddit find a bigger audience? I can get laughing at that sort of nonsense. I do not accept trying to trying to pass it off as anything more than the less-than-brilliant opinion of a random young person.
Well let's be honest, I'm hardly in a position to "further global wisdom." I don't think most people on these forums are. Second, I don't use 4chan, and barely use Reddit, and I've never posted. I brought up the video because it had already been brought up in this thread, and it's emblematic of an attitude towards science that, while not new per se, has certainly reared its head again.
I'm not a martyr, but I did have to do a segment on intelligent design in secondary school. I knew it was bullshit then, the class knew it, the teacher knew it, but he had to teach it. The only gratifying part was that we got to use indigenous myth (the Rainbow Serpent, IIRC) in place of Yaweh, which I like to imagine was a way of giving the finger to the people promoting it.
So yeah, my bullshit metre tends to be low for this kind of nonsense.
I think what's questionable is your apparent ability to discern the level of support for and societal consequences of different bad beliefs.
Bad beliefs are bad beliefs regardless of the level of support for them. And the examples I cited range from genuine belief in those ideas to genuine enforcement (e.g. the dismantling of advanced learning).
I mean, let's be fair, nothing I say or do will stem those ideas, particuarly since I don't live in the US, but even from a purely self-interested POV, bad ideas have a way of spreading. After all, a lie can spread around the world before the truth can put its pants on.