I don't understand what you're getting at completely. My vote for you was certainly a joke since I switched it as soon as I said something serious and your case was "Hello". Believe it or not.
Your "case" is based off the assumption that I was trying to imply something with my vote on you and the statement "let me think, which I didn't.

glypz isn't scummy enough for you? Vote Seon then.
No, the crux of my case is that you suppose that GE wasn't scum but there are quite a few compelling reasons listed there why GE was probably scum.

In fact you still haven't provided any reasoning as to why in the face of such a situation (those reasons) you would nevertheless think GE is not scum, hence I believe that you tried to defend your scum partner, and now are trying to back off from it because he got lynched and fallout was definitely inevitable.

And please do not quote: (as a supposed example which explains it all)

GE's claims received some more credibility and at the moment I rather have him down as a townie who did a very dumb move with keeping back his information. I might be a bit biased, because I defended him on Day 1 but I think the scums have just switched who does the killing.
Because while the second occurrence of the Axe Guy raised the possibility of night kill failures, but it proved nothing in relation to innocence or guilt, because as I raised up sometime shortly after the night kill write up:

Even if Night Kill % was the reason behind his failings, this did NOT give GE's claims more credibility, but rather brought up a question that if such was the case, wouldn't GE as scum have a even higher chance of surviving it? (Assuming of course that axe guy is a third party)

Fact is, he claimed to be hesitant to revealing, then backtracked and claimed basic townie. I'd love for you to explain how all this means that GE was a silly townie rather than a panicked scumbag who was seeing whether a soft claim could get him out of it. (Why not right? In Midgard III, "what if we hit a power role?" was a primary concern that averted quite a few lynches of possible power roles.) Tincow even used it to ride out suspicion for quite a while as Jotun, where after a fairly incriminating reveal was imminent, he played this exact card and managed to lie low)