This is mostly nonsense. Clearly scientists are human and as individuals subject to the range of human biases but I don't think we can extrapolate to a sort of racism-like group bias for the scientific community as a whole. 'Materialism' is largely a strawman hurled by theists at non theists for not believing in the supernatural. What scientists would admit to is 'naturalism', that being what science is all about, the study of what is natural, clearly anything supernatural would not be amenable to investigation by definition. When we follow what the evidence suggests we are following the evidence not some 'ideology', that is just conspiratorial thinking.
You're really having to clutch at straws to fight back, aren't you. And you should note I'm an atheist.
But that is one of my points that the sum of the individual scientist's biases is a collective ideological bias because they have pretty much all come from the same school and culture. A kind of tribal chant. To pick on the word materialism is sad. It is a word that clearly conveys a general idea of what is being expressed and has no invidious overtones to it, when applied to a group - people understand the gist of what is being said - but I can use naturalism if you want.
There's no such thing as supernatural as everything is natural, unless one provided a restrictive definition of what is natural.
You can't
follow the evidence because it does not go anywhere as it is not capable of leading. One goes where one
thinks it is pointing to based on ones education and world view. We see this when young children come up with odd conclusions, to us, to situations they are presented with or come across.