The closest Muffler Boy got to politics was an occasional reference to the “sixties generation,” which had gained control of the nation’s capital. Butler was a member of the Brady Bunch generation, an afterthought at the end of the baby boom, and he had a different set of resentments: he was sardonic, not inspirational – a reaction to the pompous self-regard of Charlie’s contemporaries. And he had a nice feel for politics.
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