And I learned that in every discipline, there's always *someone* who insists on splitting hairs in such a way that newbies will get hopelessly confused if they listen to that person.
Yeah, that's one class of internet troll. They're trying to appear expert by playing the "oneupmanship game."
On the other hand, I frequently find myself in just that role, because often the conventional jargon needs to be avoided because it leads to beginners' misconceptions. Or sometimes the beginners obviously learned some grade-school science which is simply wrong, and their unsuspected learning barriers could use some debunking.
In that case I must switch into pedantic nitpicking physics teacher mode, not because I'm trying to be a self-important troll, but because I've seen the harm that the bad language can do to students' concepts. I can attack it and head it off early: clarify with rigorously correct and clearly-defined words to shatter the learning barriers even before anyone runs up against them.
For example, terminology: "electric current" is commonly defined the same as current. Electric current isn't usually defined to mean electron flow except in this thread. Perhaps "electron current" was meant?
But what we're really talking about here are currents ...versus "charge flows." Currents include electron flows, ion flows, proton flows, charged particle beams, and displacement currents. If something creates a closed loop of magnetic field, then it's an electric current. But when discussing these issues, the term "charge flow" is a bit better than the term "electric current" because charge-flow specifically excludes displacement current, while "electric current" doesn't ...unless we SAY it does, and unless everyone reads the first messages and then adheres to the definitions there.
To cut through any BS and put it as clearly as possible, capacitor dielectrics do support "electric currents," even though there is no need to have any "charge-flows" in those currents.
Or simplicity from a non-theory standpoint: if a Rogowski probe (a clamp-on ammeter) says that there's a current through the center of its ring, then indeed there's a current, even if that current is entirely made of a vacuum with a changing radial pattern of e-fields. Clamp-on ammeters measure charge-flows in wires and displacement-currents in empty space, and they can't tell the difference. Displacement current is real. But it's not charge-flow.
PS
Another issue: are people curious about what REALLY happens inside capacitors? Delve deeply? Confront actual physics, remove the mysteries, yet try to do it without a pile of equations? If so, that's a different thread than one about circuit design, or about the One True Meaning of some piece of jargon which is defined totally differently by scientists, engineers, and the public.