I think what’s going on here is very similar to what happened with ghostbusters 2016 and sexism a couple of years ago. The people involved in making it are drumming up controversy where I’m not sure one exists.
With GB16 you had people saying that if you didn’t like it you were a sexist misogynist who was a giant manchild whose fragile masculinity was intimidated by female ghostbusters
All of which is true; most of the people against it are sexist misogynists full of shit about this movie, and wanted to see it fail because their precious boys weren't back as the Ghostbusters.
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When in reality it’s just that Ghostbusters 2016 just wasn’t that funny. For some people. Like me. (I did go and see it. I think I laughed once? I don’t think it ruined my childhood and the actors did the best they could with poor material). The furor created about the apparent sexism seemed to be the studio trying to create buzz about the film.
The studio didn't create said furor, the whiny butthurt male fans did- again because their precious male clubhouse was invaded by girls. If that's you, and you don't like being insulted, tough shit-next time, don't be like them. Be open and try to accept a change like this.
Compared to DSC describing itself as “woke” (cringe) and SMG hinting at people being intolerant, it looks like it’s the same thing going on - the generation of buzz for the show by creating a controversy around it where I’m not sure one exists.
The show's into a second season, it's got critical acclaim and fans, and so-called 'fans' were against it because of who was cast as the series leads. How hard is that to fathom?

As for the stories, it looks like said so-called 'fans' are pissy because the show's 'dark' or whatever older people love to say about current TV shows because something complex is beyond them (ironically and most likely the same people who were complaining about how the plots and characters of TNG and Voyager weren't any good, and how nothing was as complex as what was on BSG and other programs of the day.)
I also didn’t think there was any kind of heavy handed “Gay” agenda or whatever while watching the show, but these points seem to keep coming up when people talk *about* the show.
They 'come up' because people are raging homophobic morons who can't seem to accept that LGBT people exist (the same thing came up due to 'Blood & Fire' on Phase II dealing with this, and that was a show that was a complete copy of TOS. ) Again, if your're one of those people....

Just as with Ghostbusters, I get the sense of some people involved with DSC trying to create a furor where one doesn’t exist
Again, the people creating said furor are the so-called racist sexist homophobic neocon 'fans' finally showing their true colors (although I believe that these 'fans' were like this during DS9 owing to the skin color of Sisko/Brooks, which is why DS9 wasn't as popular as TNG, IMHO.)
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Possibly to distract us all from the fact that their show wasn’t very good.
To people like you. But only to people like you trapped in Star Trek's past expecting a modern-day 21st century incarnation costing millions of dollars filmed in high definition to look, be costumed, characterized, and plotted the same as its 1966 forebear program 'just because'.

Did you think Ghostbusters ain’t funny? You’re a sexist.
Did you think DSC ain’t very good? You’re intolerant.
Both are suffering because of the kind of people I mentioned above and of how much attention they get; no more, no less than that.
Now, I can’t prove my assertions here and I’m not getting on my soapbox (although I’m sure it seems that way haha!), but when I read interviews like the one in the OP, that’s certainly what *seems* to be happening. I hope I’m wrong.
So far, I find your assertions to be the same as those of the people against the Abrams movies because the 'purity' of the franchise isn't being respected. Those were wrong then as these ones of yours are wrong now.
Also, apologies if my Mintaka III comment came across as snarky. I was alluding to the tendency on the part of the DSC writers to stick in random references to better episodes of Star Trek from elsewhere in the franchise. The Mintaka III reference when Georgiou meets Tilly is a particular bugbear of mine as it served no useful purpose and reminded me of how good the TNG episode was and how bad I find Discovery.
How the frak is mentioning Mintaka III a bad thing, and why does it make Discovery a bad show automatically?

Hopefully they’ll drop all this “woke” description (whilst still trying to be progressive, just not yelling about it) as we get into season 2.
Hopefully, the showrunners will keep on doing what they're doing, and leave fans like you behind, in the dust.