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This is usually not the reason people recommend disabling root login. Since root is an anonymous account not tied to an actual person, in a corporate setting, you do not really know who used that account if you allow root login. If this is relevant for a personal home network is for you to decide. I would say there is not such a strong argument for it to be made in that setting.
I absolutely agree with your. It can makes sence the disable it for access control, loging, auditing, etc. .
But when you look online or just in the comment section here lots of ppl actually recommend it as a security meassure against attackers. "Need to brute force the username as well"