Generalizations about people you’ve never met is at best a convenience. At worst, it can be many many other things, but rarely accurate.
It is one thing to say that the schedules of D1 scholarship athletes are demanding, and tailored to the requirements of their sport. But it is quite another thing to say that this somehow means that there are not “student-athletes” on scholarship at the D1 Power 5 level.
There are, and always have been, kids who go to college only to play a sport, and do only enough academic work to remain eligible. There are also scholarship athletes who play a sport at the highest level and also take great pride in academic excellence.
Painting all D1 Power 5 scholarship athletes with a broad brush is convenient, but it’s also silly and completely inaccurate. I was a HS coach for 40 years, and I saw student athletes of every variety. We had a defensive tackle who played on scholarship at Duke for 3 years after redshirting, got his degree, and did not return for a 5th season, though the coaches wanted him to do so, and despite projecting as a starter. He went directly to law school instead, and is now a successful attorney in Richmond. I also coached or taught kids who would have never gone to college at all, often due to finances, without an athletic scholarship; some of them leveraged their sport into a career path; others did not.
But they were all different from one another, and many, many of them were wonderful students at both the HS and college level. It’s just plain ignorant to think otherwise.