Does that constitute complaining? Seems like just pointing out something factual to me.
Only I don't think it is factual as we discussed early on in this thread. IF Michigan was 10-2 with a home win over Incarnate Word instead of a road loss to Oklahoma, I don't think they'd be in anyway. Their loss to #1 Ohio State would be forgiven but their best win would still be Washington (I think). Washington is a 5-4/8-4 unranked team. I just don't think that would get them in this year because there are 10-2 teams with better wins.
Texas is clearly different. If you replaced their road loss to tOSU with a home win over Incarnate Word then they'd be a 10-2/6-2 team with wins over ranked OU, Vandy, and aTm teams and a "quality" loss at Georgia. Their only weakness would be their bad loss to Florida. Their H2H wins over Vandy and Oklahoma would probably keep them above the Commodores and Sooners and they would likely be in.
But I do like your point about there also being a question as to whether or not it's good for OU and OSU.
This is an important point because obviously 'benefit to the winner' is the offset to 'detriment to the loser' in the risk/reward calculus.
For Ohio State this year, there is no material benefit but Ohio State is an unusual case as an undefeated team. If you replaced the win over Texas with a win over Incarnate Word, Ohio State *MIGHT* drop to #2 but it would be irrelevant because they'd still be playing a CG against #1 for the #1 seed so no benefit.
Oklahoma is a different question:
In the last CFP rankings the Sooners were the highest ranked 2-loss team. Would OU be the highest ranked 2-loss team without the Michigan win? I don't know. They'd still have better wins than Notre Dame and a H2H win over Bama but I don't know. Their case is definitely stronger WITH the Michigan win than it would be WITHOUT it.