Oh trust me, I hang out in that community on social media, a lot of people do have an issue with these creators. It's enough of a problem there are posts almost every week about trauma survivors getting shit for their art/stories, doesn't help that many of them create adult content for a living and are slowly being pushed off the internet on top of puritans calling them horrible people for their creations. It doesn't matter if you don't feel they're the same, they get treated the exact same way, and in the end the statement that you should treat people based on how they treat others still applies. What you create, unless it's literal propaganda, shouldn't matter because people are more complicated than that. Even if they aren't a survivor or marginalized, no one deserves to be treated like garbage unless they're massively treating others like garbage.
To clarify, I'm not equating critiquing someone's work or actions with treating someone like crap, I'm specifically talking about dogpiling and threatening someone, and/or going out of your way to treat them badly purely for creating transgressive work regardless of who they are as a person. If you think that's okay to do that's messed up, even if they don't take the proper criticism that isn't bad enough to warrant going for their throats, unless they're an absolute terrible person.
Edit: @NickRowler Wow, I think I actually saw that! The whole thing was wild, had me questioning whether those people were really adults because they were acting like babies. Kinda reminded me of this influencer who had her own make-up line, it came out that her lipsticks were dangerous, tons of reviews came out showing mold, hair and metal shards in the lipstick, along with pictures of people with infections due to the make-up. I don't remember all of it but I think she doubled down for a bit before giving up and recalling everything, with her career thoroughly tarnished.
The beauty community is something else, man.