I don’t think it’s worth getting into a whole argument over this but you’ve got your color theory 101 wrong, and it’s really about light more than color theory. I’ll yield at this point.
You clearly do not understand the significant difference, Milpool. Take any two true RGB color separation filters and put them together, viewing a strong light source, natural or artificial full-spectrum, and the result is almost black. I've even viewed solar eclipses that way. But take the strongest magenta and yellow filters you can find, do the same thing, and you'll see that a fair amount of residual white light still gets through.
Do the same thing looking a something bright red. With either a nearly pure green 61 filter of 47 or 47B blue, that red object will look black. But if you look at it with either a yellow or magenta filter, you'll still discern the red color. One catergory of filters is truly sharp-cutting; the other is not. No, VC papers are not sensitive to red light, but this does prove how some white light is getting through in
either case subtractively, whether Y or M, containing some of both blue and green as well as red.
Yes, you can go either way in terms of VC paper printing. Magenta subtracts green light, while yellow subtracts blue; but the effect can never be as downright intense as full true green versus full true blue. Color theory 101.
I don't want to press this fact too hard in the present context, because one rarely needs to go to those extremes with today's excellent VC papers unless they're dealing with really bad negatives to begin with, needing a lot of "salvage" printing. But there is a significant difference between additive and subtractive light in principle per se.
And there are times one basically just wants to print VC using ordinary enlarger light, but then add a little selective punch to one of the extremes exclusively. True additive G versus B filters do a better job of that.