dedalos, I'm curious what you're getting at? You seem to delight in taking tactical axioms/rules of thumb and seeking out the exceptions. Which is healthy and really what the better sticks do. But then you follow up by arguing the conventional wisdom is wrong because there are exceptions. Many vet players are probably aware of the exceptions, but that does not change the fact that 95 out of 100 times in a random MA engagment the conventional wisdom/axiom/rule of thumb holds true. I know levithan and blu can make a hot merges vs a HO avoider and have the advantage if they didn't win outright at the merge. That information is really only useful to me if I know that's who I'm merging with. However very few of thousands of players will ever reach the level to read all of the subtle positioning nuances that they base their maneuvering decisions on, let alone pull off the maneuvering. So what is the point you are getting at? Getting players to think out of the box? That's a good point. Or just that there are exceptions to the rules, therefore the rules are invalid? That's nonsense, the exception is 'exceptional' for a reason. Or are you just trolling because for some unfathomable reason there are not enough unskilled players running headlong, guns blazing into every plane they see already?
and from the "honor, respect, fair play thread,
On the other hand. If I see the majority of my friendlies within visual ganging 1 con low, I will dive in an remove their target without a second thought. I don't care about the kill though I do get it a surprising amount of times. What I do care about is being stuck as the only friendly with any energy when the next wave of higher enemies come in. The sooner the distraction is removed, the better off my tactical situation is 
color me with contradicting messages?

Tactically, staying up as opposed to pigpiling the solo con *is* poor decision - makes more sense to stay up for that incoming wave. You can let them go diving down into the pigpile to help their solo gangee, giving you, as the remaining high con a variety of tactical options.
Before you say, apples and oranges, let's keep it to bananas, meaning you're both encouraging newbies to go against "conventional wisdom," i.e. tactics. Going for the HO and pigpiling one lower con both result in leaving one with a tactically inferior position - despite what both you and dedalos claim, respectively.
When I duel deadlos to test his theory.. i may or may not avoid the HO and instead HO back, making it the usual 50-50 proposition, thereby negating his claim, which only works because both know the deal, and the HOer will be anticipating an avoidance, negating the actual HO shot.