it doesn’t matter about the construction of the chain: if you apply oil on both side and create an airlock, it keeps the oil out. Where the oil doesn’t flow, it it doesn’t lubricate.
With bushingless chains, the lubricant flow is entirely different. If oil is applied to the rollers, it can easily flow into both sides of the rollers, because air (and oil) can flow through the gap between the "half bushings". If a bushingless chain is oiled only on the rollers, for instance by a narrow-spout oil can, the oil is able to flow into both sides of the rollers, through the gap and onto the middles of the link pins. The oil then flows out along the link pins to the side-plate junctions. Since the side plates are oiled from the inside, there is a natural self-flushing action that brings dirt and sand out of the chain instead of into it.
They're not my words, but from the Sheldon article
you suggested those who lacked understanding read