Yes - I can imagine some tv political pundit asking Boromir some silly question and getting a good thumping for impudence. Tolkien wrote the stories as a means of exploring language - that was his starting point. He also wanted to explore the horrors of war as experienced by a simple agrarian people, a substitute for his beloved Anglo-Saxons. It was never meant to be thoroughly realistic - how can you have a world that scientifically essentially stands still or even goes into partial technological reverse for thousands of years? Don't worry about all that, just enjoy the adventure!
If any of you have every written a longish fictional piece, it can be very disheartening to hear criticism from readers who pick apart actual or perceived inconsistencies in your story. It happens to all authors, to a greater or lesser extent, prehaps in proportion to the length of their works and also perhaps in relation to the degree to which their story is set in a fantasy universe - the more an author draws upon the real world and actual history, the more foundations and sources they have to provide structure to their storyline. No-one is every going to write a book about Julius Caesar conquering North America.
Now, there's a thought...