The value of such advice is subject to context, and subject to change.
The advice is mainly formed around long exposures on a tripod, with OIS designs that tend to drift off in one direction during a long exposure. If one is just using a tripod to take the weight of the lens off of the photographer and just leave it pointed in a direction without having to lift it, and one is using short exposures, and handling the camera and lens, moving them for shots in real time, then stabilization can easily be beneficial. Same with any shorter exposure immediately following a mirror and/or shutter shock; if the tripod setup is not super-rigid, the system may oscillate during exposure, and could use some help from stabilization.
Many newer stabilization systems recognize a steady lens or camera on a solid tripod or table and behave accordingly.