From very beginning "Kirchoff for the birds" fans arrogantly insulted nearly everybody who disagree with them.
There's no such thing as "Kirchhoff for the birds" fans. I myself was considered a king of circuit analysis when I was in college. I got my first job as an engineer because of that ability.
However, I know darn well that Kirchhoff can only be applied to lumped circuits and it doesn't work for anything under a varying electromagnetic field. Because, under that condition, a circuit becomes an "antenna", and antennas are everything but lumped. You'll have induction everywhere so it will be impossible to solve a circuit using Kirchhoff which does not provide the tools for either designing or probing your circuits.
How do I know that? By my own experience. When I got my first job as an engineer, digital circuits were leaving the domains of Kirchhoff and foraying into the realm of electromagnetism. Frequencies were such that the wavelengths were becoming as short as the size of the PCBs.
We had problems with the companies that designed our PCBs at the time, because they were kirchhoffalwaysholders (the cute name I decided to bestow upon those who think that Kirchhoff always holds) not by choice, but because they were used to low frequency circuits, where Kirchhoff is good enough.
We had to invite the help of our colleagues from the radio division, for whom Maxwell was second nature, and use their experience to instruct our designers how to properly design a PCB for higher frequencies, which is commonplace today.
This kirchhoffalwaysholdery sucks, therefore, because not only it is a pseudo-scientific doctrine, it is an encumbrance for any serious electronics engineering today.
And apparently it is now taking the shape of a religious movement where its converts get very offended when it is shown in theory or practice that their nonsense dogma is false.
As Lewin says, "this tells you something about them".