I have responded to that and made that clear already. I am not against well-funded open-source projects. In that case, the funders are doing some kind of "charity" work. They get very experienced developers, they pay them well and make sure they stick to the project for long. There is a well organised structure. It is almost like an actual company, just that the code is released.
I also admire lots of well-funded academic projects on github. I have seen wonderful ones on computational biology, computational physics and computational chemistry.
I am referring to the vast majority of garbage "projects" on github which are mainly low effort, unfinished, knock-off crapware.