That's not true. I understand exactly what is going on here. You have asserted that there is a misconception about how spark plugs work regarding the flow of electricity through the threads. You and others have shown diagrams indicating that, essentially, there is plenty of contact on the actual side of the thread that is held in tension against its counterpart. The "other" side of the thread constitutes a "space" and I suppose you are saying that any antisieze or grease, or air migrates to that space. I would point out that antisieze works by minimizing metal-to-metal contact. I would suggest that dielectric grease works the same way. My argument would be that the presence of a dielectric immediately reduces some contact, and may degrade over time.
All of that notwithstanding, the age-old question is whether there should be anti-sieze on sparkplugs. Many posts have beaten this issue to death, and I think we are in agreement (?) that the plugs are manufactured as to not require anti-sieze or lubrication. As in so many cases on BITOG, half of the world "knows better" than what the manufacturer recommends.
If I have this right, we are on the "no lube, no antisieze" side of things and the rest of this doesn't matter, but there is not widespread misconception about how plugs work, and no meaningful disagreement on the orientation of an installed, torqued plug or where the electricity is likely to flow.