I think if you read the rest of what they say, they will tell you that you should listen to the speakers before you buy them (which is excellent advice). The "accuracy" rating is only one aspect of speaker performance, though it is an important one. Often, though, people do not like "accurate" speakers, as, for example, many people like exaggerated bass and therefore will select a speaker that Consumer Reports rates poorly.
What often happens with "audiophiles" is that they rate speakers they never heard based upon reputation of the brand. And then they complain about what Consumer Reports does! What Consumer Reports does is measure the frequency response and tells you which one had the flattest response. Whether that is the one you want or not is another matter, but when one does actual measurements, one does not always rate the most expensive product as best, nor the one with the best reputation.
I seem to recall some years back that they pointed out a horrible frequency response anomaly in a speaker made by a well regarded company, and yet many "audiophiles" loved the speaker (though others noticed the horrible frequency response and hated it; CR was right about the problem).
You should realize that people often select things based upon reputation rather than actual performance, and do not bother to even consider the possibility that a "bad" brand might make something decent. Some people judge by price, and imagine that a more expensive product must be better, which, of course, is obviously false when you think about it. Others judge them by how they look, which, again, is not going to tell you how it sounds.
Basically, when selecting speakers, you should listen to as many different speakers, of as many different types (e.g., ribbon tweeters, dome tweeters, planar drivers, etc.) as possible, and remember that no matter what you buy, it will not be the best in every way. Pick the ones with the defects that annoy you least and be happy with your choice.
Of course, if instead of listening to the speakers, you wish to have them to impress your "audiophile" friends, you shouldn't bother with listening to them and just buy the ones with the best reputation rather than the ones that actually sound good to you.