I've noticed this amongst the newer "careerist" sort of software developer who is stumbling into the field for money, as opposed to the obsessive computer geek of yesteryear, who practiced it as a hobby. This character archetype is a transplant, say, less than five years ago from another, often non-technical discipline, and was taught or learned from overly simplistic materials that decry systems programming, or networking, or computer science concepts as unnecessary, impractical skills, reducing everything to writing JavaScript glue code between random NPM packages found on google.
Especially in a time where the gates have come crashing down to pronouncements of, "now anybody can learn to code by just using LLMs," there is a shocking tendency to overly simplify and then pontificate upon what are actually bewilderingly complicated systems wrapped up in interfaces, packages, and layers of abstraction that hide away that underlying complexity.
It reminds me of those quantum woo people, or movies like What the Bleep Do We Know!? where a bunch of quacks with no actual background in quantum physics or science reason forth from drastically oversimplified, mathematics-free models of those theories and into utterly absurd conclusions.