FUD? No. There are plenty of people on plenty of sites asking, "How do I do this very simple thing using systemd?", along with plenty of answers which depend on which distro it is, how recent it is, et cetera.
For instance, DNS handling and NTP keep coming up over and over, and it's almost becoming a meme. Why? Because it's the Microsoft mentality - we (the systemd people) know better than you (you're just the machine's owner and administrator), and we'll take care of this. You want to? Not without a fight.
So no, it's not FUD when reasonable people can't give reasonable answers for how to do something that's otherwise reasonably simple.
1. Plenty of sites ask all kinds of questions that depend on which distro is it, how recent is it, etc. This doesn't mean that systemd is bad because the answers change over time.
2. DNS handling and NTP comes up over and over...for who exactly? I work with Linux as a full-time job and this has never come up as a pain point.
3. This "Microsoft mentality" thing is such a 2014 argument about systemd. Basically because systemd didn't perfectly conform to "the UNIX philosophy," we are assuming that they are evil bastards like Microsoft. E.g., journalctl had the gall to make a queryable logging system, and because that concept has some passing similarties the Windows Event Viewer it must be bad. If Linux Torvalds has a strong opinionated design on something and refuses a contribution to the Linux kernel, that's cool because he's Enlightened Tech Jesus, but if systemd's maintainers dare to have opinionated design they are draconian Microsoft employees. And again no significant controversial event has happened since that 2014/2015 era of systemd when, really, the software was much older and less mature at that time so disagreements were understandable.
4. Again you claim there are no reasonable answers for how to do "something," when really there are. If nobody knew the answers it wouldn't be the init system for pretty much every big name Linux distro out there (Ubuntu...Red Hat...Fedora...Amazon Linux...Oracle...Arch...SteamOS...)