Good rant. I saw that comment in YT and wanted to reply to that person.
I even got the text half way done, but as I usually don't comment on YT and then the saying about arguing on the Internet and paralympics came to mind, I just decided not to...
I absolutely love vintage teardowns and very much love tearing vintage electronics down myself, especially test equipment, military stuff and all sorts of weird and special-purpose devices.
Yes, I know how these things work, I know how a low leakage PCB design is made and why it's like that and I know how a high current lab PSU works. But it's always very interesting to see how an engineer has solved a particular problem and then you can stop and think for a second, how I'd made it and why that engineer made it the way he did and then perhaps you can learn something from it.
Very useful knowledge if you have to design custom stuff yourself.
Tearing down a kindle or, I don't know, a kitchen timer... yeah, I suppose it's interesting to see how a modern mass produced monolithic design looks like and how to minimise BOM, per-unit and production costs when you do things in high volumes.
Not tenth of the (self)educational value in that, though.