I absolutely agree, but wonder why in photography this is different (is it though?). Is fixing-in-post so much more common? That is a different discussion maybe.
I can imagine scenarios where just fixing the skintones (getting them close to standard skintones under standard light in sRGB, AdobeRGB, ProPhoto), keeping the rest of the picture as is for whatever reasons, a very helpful tool. But that would require awareness for ‘wrong’ skintones from photographers. The most you hear is that certain camera makers have bad colorscience and that skin comes out weird. Tools for checking whats wrong? nope.