This advice bothers me a lot. Labeling possibly true knowledge as dangerous knowledge (as the example with statements about average behavior of groups) is deeply worrisome and is the sort of thing that if one isn't careful would be used by people to justify ignoring relevant data about reality. I'm also concerned that this piece conflates actual knowledge (as in empirical data) and things like group identity which seems to be not so much knowledge but rather a value association.
I am grouping together "everything that goes into your brain," which includes lots and lots of stuff, most of it unconscious. See research on priming), for example.
This argument is explicitly about encouraging people to justify ignoring relevant data about reality. It is, I recognize, an extremely dangerous proposition, of exactly the sort I am warning against!
At risk of making a fully general counterargument, I think it's telling that a number of commenters, yourself included, have all but said that this post is too dangerous.
A few examples (in approximately increasing order of controversy):
If you proceed anyway...