I don't think it was ever Stallman's point. He is smart enough to recognize most users aren't going to be technically competent.
He's also smart enough to recognize is that most people are going to have someone technically competent in their circle of friends, or within few minutes of walking distance. So people need a set of rights that will allow them to ask or hire someone else to care for their computing. In this sense, Free Software is like Right to Repair - it isn't about making individuals technically competent; it's about enabling local markets of specialists.
He's also smart enough to recognize is that most people are going to have someone technically competent in their circle of friends, or within few minutes of walking distance. So people need a set of rights that will allow them to ask or hire someone else to care for their computing. In this sense, Free Software is like Right to Repair - it isn't about making individuals technically competent; it's about enabling local markets of specialists.