Educators in the US are mostly boorishly uneducated.
A Masters in Teaching is a professional degree (it exists to get the holder an automatic raise), and even by those low standards it's at the very bottom of the barrel, even lower than the average MBA. A doctorate in education is closer to a normal masters degree.
"Educated" is the past tense. Some people just stop learning after a while, even though there were capable of it in the past.
People that have education and continue to get it are the people that can "avoid these problems"... but we don't really have a good word for "educated and able to learn", so the OP just said "educated".
Perhaps they have managed to get a Master's without actually becoming "educated." It's not like it's not possible—you can become an expert in a very deep-yet-narrow field without ever having to learn how to think and problem-solve in the general case (which is what a liberal arts degree was supposed to be for.)
But you'll never get to facebook-level with a niche audience like that. It certainly avoids some of the problems with dealing with stupidity though.