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That last bit isn't quite true. When contributions themselves are MIT-licensed, they can be relicensed. When the contributions are GPL-licensed, they can't be relicensed by the product owner, because that right was not granted to them by the contributor. That's where contributor agreements and copyright assignments come in.
(Also I'm pretty sure you wanted "disingenuous", not "ingenuous".)
Right. I was focusing on the point that what matters is the copyright notice. While your pointing out that you can relicense MIT code because MIT is so permissive, while you can relicense GPL to almost nothing, as it's not compatible with most other licenses. However that's kinda moot, you couldn't include GPL code into an MIT licensed project anyway due to the copyleft.
(Thanks for the "ingenuous" correction, I did indeed - to my non-natively speaking brain the "in" acted as a negation to the default "genuous", which yeah, just isn't a thing of course)