Part of the reason why I call Gate right-wing wank more than pure milwank is because of that scene when they report to the Diet. You know the scene I'm talking about, the one with perhaps the most painfully obvious strawman political I've seen in any fictional work the past decade. It read like a scene transcribed from a bashfic from one of the worst fandoms on the web, except that the author was bashing a caricature of real-world political figures who object to war crimes and military abuse of civilian populations instead of Albus Dumbledore.
That particular scene was so absurd that it wouldn't have been much sillier if the character in question was called a "damn peacenik Pinko Commie" and was shown afterwards to be taking money from a cackling Chinese agent while burning a Japanese flag.
Yeah, it can be pretty bad at parts, quite a bit worse than most (albeit not all) milwank. Even in relatively terrible American stuff, at the very least the Reds are a credible military threat (random "terrorists" generally aren't, but that's a different issue altogether), and American soldiers, when they win, will tend to do so by exploiting some advantage they can reasonably be assumed to possess.
If this was culturally transplanted to America, it would feature enemies of comparable strength to the US (Nazis, Soviets, modern Russians, w/e) being effortlessly crushed on every occasion, with the only "danger" coming from backstabbing Democrats. Meanwhile, a single US Marine sent to Ancient Rome would be capable of beating twenty trained Legionaries alone with his bare hands because being an American soldier gives you supernatural combat ability (this applies to the Americans back home fighting Russians/Germans/Chinese by the way). Also, periodically you would get to see the perspectives of enemies talking about how badass the Americans are and how they wish they were as tough as the Americans.
Mind, the premise is still good, and the manga at least seems to imply that
really interesting stuff might happen later, but that will probably occur, at best, several seasons later. Oh well.
In other news,
Heavy Object isn't
that bad. The fanservice is pretty over the top, but the premise is solid and the setting isn't too bad (albeit there is some silliness, like the "Legitimate Kingdom" making me think it was established by Nigerian Princes to scam people, only for people to take it so seriously that they actually gave them political power), plus there are some neat little twists and points made that I think most shows wouldn't bother with. It does strike me as being pretty silly that no one in this world ever considered that, instead of throwing expensive military hardware at an indestructible war machine, they could just send commandos to destroy it while it's sitting around in a base being repaired, or that they could attack the supply lines needed to keep it running.
Owarimonogatari is quite good thus far. If it keeps it up, I'd put it pretty high on the list of Nisio Isin anime adaptations.