I don't really follow this. A fleshed-out example describing the trade-offs is almost mandatory for this kind of criticism since this could be very easily due to a misunderstanding or misapplication of OOP rather than a problem with it.
I don't have enough experience to agree or disagree with the quote you're responding to, but I think the intent was in part to claim that OOP gets misapplied enough that if you're working with a large enough group or company, that's what you'll end up with.