That's cute and all, but they're the hosting provider. They can stick all that shit right in with everything else that's required to make the site run, and they don't need you to log in to data mine all the posts.
All of that stuff really only protects you if the website is on your side. Don't get caught out because you think you're secure.
Then the site just won't load or will only partially load. Like I said, I have to manually okay scripts, cookies, whatever. I get a list of stuff to let through or block on most pages.
It is kind of inconvenient sometimes, but generally speaking I just don't bother and find somewhere else to be if a page won't load. On very rare occasions I'll decide to let something through temporarily to access something specific.
Also, the VPN is particularly good at circumventing that kind of stuff. What do I care if it's getting analytics for an IP address that thousands of people use?
I also have manually set up my browser to block all tracking.
My me-irl e-mail is never used to register at any websites and only IRL friends and family know it. The one I use for places like this has no personal information tied to it, and I use a completely different e-mail for personal and business stuff.
Granted, most people don't do all this stuff, but I'm pretty confident that the average website data mining software isn't much of an issue for me.
If a site is particularly aggressive about it, I Tor.