There is no problem.
Yocto is a build-your-own-custom-Linux-distro constructor set. The only people who use this tool are embedded software developers. Questions about using Yocto, BitBake, and related tools are inherently on-topic for Stack Overflow, just as questions about compilers (e.g., GCC) and IDEs (e.g., Visual Studio) are inherently on-topic for Stack Overflow.
The vast majority of recent questions that I see tagged yocto are absolutely on-topic for Stack Overflow. I see no evidence that these tags are collecting non-programming questions.
So, it doesn't need a tag warning, the tag doesn't need to be removed, and neither you nor anyone else should go on a crusade closing questions on that tag, because your close-votes would be inaccurate and in conflict with site policy.
Also with a read-the-documentation-for-me-pls vibe, as most questions are coming from new/newish users.
This doesn't matter. Seriously. The only way this matters is that it makes the questions easier to answer. Stack Overflow's scope is not defined as all of the things not covered by the documentation. Our scope is all questions about programming topics and tools, regardless of whether they're covered by the documentation or not. If we don't already have a Q&A about that topic, and it is on-topic for Stack Overflow, then asking and answering that question are useful contributions to our knowledge base, regardless of where the answer came from or where else it might be found.
I do see a general issue where people are asking questions under these tags that are unclear and/or too broad because they lack sufficient background with these technologies and don't know where to begin. Probably because effectively utilizing the technologies that fall under the umbrella of these tags requires a relatively advanced understanding of hardware, kernels, and other low-level aspects of programming that most software developers have no knowledge of or experience with. Such questions are generally unsuitable for Stack Overflow and should be closed. However, this is, unfortunately, not a problem unique to any of these tags related to embedded development. Such questions can and should be dealt with on a case-by-case basis, not by creating friction for embedded developers who have just as much right to use Stack Overflow as a resource as any other type of developer.