Please...don't refer to the Meta Effect as if it were some sort of hose which could be sprayed in some arbitrary direction, or as if it were some militia group which could be called upon in dire situations.
It doesn't feel right.
Specifically, to answer this question:
When is it appropriate to exploit this "meta effect"?
It really isn't and I want to say never do this intentionally, but it's a very common occurrence around these parts. I personally believe it to be a symptom of discussion moreso than anything else, since it can quickly mobilize a group of active users to take action on a question or answer, whether that action is ultimately constructive or ultimately destructive.
I've seen it go both ways - there were good instances for the Meta Effect, and there were very, very bad instances of the Meta Effect. I've certainly tripped it on at least one occasion, but the intent was never to force the community to take action on that post at that time, but rather to draw a broader consensus.
TL;DR: It's a symptom of more constructive discussion more times than not. I personally adamantly disagree with invoking it intentionally as I feel it has the power to cause more harm than good.
Let's answer these points in turn, as to why one may think it's appropriate to leverage the Meta Effect.
- Collect sympathy upvotes for one's post.
There's nothing worse than someone asking for upvotes on their post. Doesn't really matter what for, either - it's just...tacky. However, I will say that in all three of your examples, the Meta Effect was happenstance more than anything else (and I even made reference to that in one of those posts).
I will admit that a lot of people discuss their specific question or specific answer here, which comes with its own tag for it (specific-question and specific-answer), but their larger intent is to understand the rationale as to why their question/answer got downvoted more than it is to collect pity points...to which, I wish I could just dupe-close as this question on Meta Stack Exchange which nicely sums it all up.
- Try to get others to jump the close-vote bandwagon
Not a fan of this approach either, since it comes across as people feeling like and behaving like this sort of voting is socially acceptable.
But there's a fine line, or the Stack Overflow Close Vote Room couldn't exist, could it?
I will say that there are a lot of people with close (and delete) privileges that will pile on extra votes to do one of those two actions just because everyone else seems to be doing that, too - enough so that I have to spell them out explicitly and apologize to every other person with those privileges that doesn't fall into that pattern.
Those who vote for the sake of voting aren't the sort of people you want to present with a question to see if the question is suitable for the site, since they're not making a decision based on that. Presenting a bad question to a lot of people will have its intended effect of that question being closed, potentially deleted, and if it's egregious enough on the part of the OP, having them question-banned, but that sort of decision making is what you want slightly more level-headed members handling, which is why I'm personally more comfortable with the SOCVR than someone posting that on Meta.
- Or the downvote bandwagon
This is just as bad, honestly. "I think this question should be downvoted and you should too!"
Again, in the example you reference, the question is very much in the camp of, "Why doesn't the system delete these things?", as opposed to the camp of, "Why don't we downvote these things?"
- Or, conversely, get questions or answers undeleted
The review queues should be unsurfacing questions (maybe answers? I haven't been in the queues for months) that have been deleted and subsequently edited, which would make them more appealing to be undeleted. I would say that the queues alone aren't the most ideal way to get the message out that this question is worth undeleting, but it is preferable to the Meta post that we get from time to time.
Disputed flags can't be "undone", nor are they actively detrimental to one's flagging privileges (and I think we both know this), but these questions are more to gain closure on why the community was split on this decision, which goes back to the specific question/answer discussions which are largely okay to have anyway.