Astronomy education tends to suffer under certain types of government, as they either consider it pointless fluff or they find it more convenient to have a dumbed-down populace that lacks science literacy. Some teachers won't teach it because the Big Bang clashes with their religious notions.Well, they don't specifically target us, but rather they've cut funding to programs and facility use that we've taken advantage of in the past, making it much harder for us to do anything. For instance, they would often advertise our events, usually with a sign right outside their office, which would in turn let park attendees know that something was happening in the park. But now that no longer will happen according to new park rules. We can't even mention that we're doing anything on social media. If we do anything at all, it has to be unofficially and without their help, and done on the down low.
Also we've for several years had a big outreach event happen in september/october that would attract a huge crowd in a rather big and popular park along with good speakers. It's been very successful for many years. One year we had Bob McDonald. The park was hoping to get designated with a special dark-sky status at one point, but now all that is up in the air, and there is no indication of the event happening at all this year.
But yeah, it is regressive of them, and to be honest, it feels rather reckless with no forward thinking at all.
Just a couple of days ago I saw a meme in a Cosmos group on FB stating that there are more hydrogen atoms in a molecule of water than there are stars in our solar system.
It took a few people 30 seconds to a minute to parse this out, but most of us either immediately or soon nodded our agreement that yes, of course this made sense.
But then one idiot started carrying on that galaxies are really solar systems because they have stars, and another idiot stated that there are NO stars in our solar system.

I'd wonder if it's a recent thing that there are people who don't know that the Sun is a star, but am reminded of an old Jeopardy! episode in which the answer was "It's the nearest star to Earth."
Nobody got it right, and one woman got the vaguest, dimmest expression on her face and guessed, "Omega?"
Alex Trebek was surprised, and said in an "everyone knows this" tone of voice, "It's the Sun!"