I disagree with the hammering on guides.
First, I totally get what has made people feel thay way - and share the distaste and even vitriol for the influencer/guides. Would love to find a way to eliminate/ban them.
I've used guides in Currituck Sound and surrounding areas for decades. Unless you're a member of one of the six-figure clubs or one of the old blind license holders (or lucky enough to win the lotto on one as they come available), it's the only way to hunt that area. Pretty much every possible blind location is taken and you can't hunt within xxx yards of a blind.
The guides I've used are commercial fishermen, crabbers, ferry boat captains, etc. - all watermen who make their living in those waters, and who guide in the winter because they love the area and waterfowling. Some have been long-term guides for one of the clubs, and have rights to lease and guide in certain club blinds when not being used. These clubs have hundreds (some thousands) of acres and blinds, 90% of which are unused at any given time. At any rate, these guides aren't minting money - they're supplementing family income and doing something they love in the same way we all do when hunting. They're (generally) great story-tellers about the region and its history, and they're very conservation-oriented.
I use a guide when I hunt dove in S Texas. He (and his team) are locals with other jobs (farmers, LEOs, etc.) thay work their tails off working with farmers to make land and habitat available and productive. They are extremely protective of their resources, spreading pressure, etc. because they know if something gets shot out their clients in following weeks will be screwed (and won't come back). They've helped a lot of "smaller" farmers stay in business with hunting income thay might have otherwise gone to big business.
I use guides from time to time for fishing outside of my home area, too.
Personally, I love using guides in other areas because I can learn from them about the area, its history, and the specific history of game in the area.
Again, there are definitely bad egg guides, newbies trying to make a buck by guiding, and influencer/abuser types. But the overwhelming number of guides I've used are no different than most of us, love the game/sport as we do, and enjoy being out with likeminded sportsmen and sharing their resources and expertise. They charge as a way of offsetting some of the costs of their passions, and maybe helping make ends meet, and they arent taking advantage of people or abusing resources.