anime tourist/invader doesnt know what "shonen" means
(media.scored.co)
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So far the only grossly political thing I've noticed in the story was right at the beginning of the Gun Demon arc, with the whole backstory on the appearance of gun demons. It was hard to figure exactly what the author's intentions were, but it read like some anti-second amendment fantasy tripe. That's the only "Westaboo" thing I could gleam so far.
I separate art from artist, so I don't really pay attention to what writers/artists say about their personal feelings and beliefs. But the above was the only time I thought the author was soapboxing.
Well it would have been really awkward to pivot to the world's most feared boogeyman being the 99.9% Survival Rate Disease Demon in light of world events since the series' start.
Honestly, it feels less like that was him trying to be political and more him trying to pick something universally feared that could still be "banned" by the world as a terrified preventative measure. Like, you can't ban Darkness, or Sharks, or Knives even.
I understand that, it's just the details as to why it built up (media sensationalism, increasing violence) felt like it was a little political. Maybe I was reading into it too much.
I get what you are saying. I just think it was more just coincidental, and us being Americans where such narratives are common, then intentional.
Else he would have leaned a lot harder into it, and cut the throwaway line about "people still got guns they are easy to make, it didn't work." Which is basically the entire pro-2A argument anyway.
When I watched CSM with some people we started guessing what thinly veiled metaphor the Gun Devil was. We guessed gun control and nukes (it is Japan and the event killed lots of people). Netflix was involved IIRC so we naturally assumed they'd want some message.
Oh wow, my mind completely forgot about the connection between "mass death in a few seconds" and that. It adds a lot more sense to the reasoning.