I don't want to jump into any discourse. I do however want to point out one misconception about dishwashers with the disposal blade versus a manual filter: all "self-cleaning" chopper equipped dishwashers *still* filter the water. At least, this is true for any Whirlpool built machine since at least the mid 90's. The PowerClean platform is touted by many to still be one of the best dishwashers to have graced the planet, and it also fully filters the wash water as well, because of the mesh accumulator chamber under the wash arm. The soil is spun out with centrifugal force and some of the water pressure is directed straight into that filter chamber through a small passage inside the impeller chamber, much the same way a Dyson cyclonic vacuum spins the dirt out of the air inside the cones. This is also true for the Voyager and now the new Maytag platform that derives from the GlobalWash design of the current manual-filter WPs, KitchenAids, and Kenmores. The current Maytag's accumulator is housed under the wash arm above the spot the manual filter would normally sit, and in all mentioned machines, the drain pump pulls straight from that chamber, pulling the soil out.
I will agree that if care is not taken to avoid letting fibrous foods like celery, or labels/stickers and toothpicks fall in, the screen behind the blade will get clogged. Absolutely. But I will also say that it almost takes deliberate negligence to get to that point. The pic I posted is pretty extreme, I've never seen one like this on a Voyager. But the Kenmore Elite-Voyager machine my grandparent's had, before I gave them the slightly famous-to-this-site WP 920 model, had a fair amount of crud around the outer edges of that screen. Nothing that affected performance, but after around five years of use, that was the result.
If you do choose/have chosen the Maytag machine, I don't think you'll have a bit of problem so long as common sense is used loading it. As with most things during the internet era, if there were wide spread problems with them after all these years with this design, you'd have heard about it, and they would have absolutely abandoned and shifted the Maytags to the manual filter design by now and wouldn't be selling them like they do.
