a thought
For the sake of impartial discussion, I think it's best we keep this topic only for those who aren't actually playing the current game. That can include those who were playing, but have died or whatever and aren't anymore. If you were a former player, please remember not to discuss anything that might influence the current game directly. This is just a generalized discussion of GTW strategy, not a discussion of the current game.
All the jumping on bandwagoners the last few games is kind of strange to me. If you think about it, what's the point in even giving arguments to explain your votes, if you're just going to suspect anybody who is convinced by them? While true, it's possible somebody might be a terrorist and vote on the safest choice, picking some arbitrary number of what constitutes suspicion based on what order they voted in is a little odd. Is it the third person to vote for an individual evil? The fourth? Fifth? Maybe they just heard the last four people's arguments for voting for the individual and thought it made logical sense. Certainly somebody who brings nothing else to the game besides a "me too" vote in every round isn't helping things all that much, but accusing people of bandwagoning in any of the first few rounds is a silly way to figure out who the terrorists are. Perhaps if there is a pattern, that might generate suspicion, especially if there are other factors, but doing it once or twice doesn't constitute a pattern, and without some other kind of evidence, I don't think it's very helpful. Somebody did say that in the last game that I "created" a bandwagonable target and thus determined who was guilty from that. It ended up that who ended up voting with me were terrorists, but it was really the fact that I was targeted for death that was the determining factor, combined with voting patterns in the round in which a terrorist was voted out. There was also Manta's gambit, which frankly was random coincidence. It was far more complex than simply who it was that was considered bandwagoning. Looking at it as "bandwagons = guilty" is incorrect.
Frankly I haven't even been paying attention to who votes for who or when, so this shouldn't be taken as a hint or anything of the sort for the current game. I don't even read most of your posts. Maybe the terrorists have been bandwagoning, maybe they're the ones avoiding it or arguing against it. All I know is that the term has come up far more than usual lately, so this is just a thought on what I see as a logical fallacy many players seem to have (or maybe just pretending to have). Maybe next time I am a player in one of these games, something other than perceived bandwagoning can be used to determine guilt. Voting safely, while not particularly helpful, is a valid survival strategy. Agreement with logical arguments shouldn't be grounds for getting voted off, nor should a player who is trying to stay alive be necessarily evil.