In the middle of an interesting article about digital cash, forwarded here by Bob Hettinga, there was the line:
After all, the kind of soccer moms who elected Bill Clinton
"Divided by a common language" as I am I genuinly don't know what that means. And I can't even guess from context. I'd have expected a dig at liberals or feminists or welfare recipients at that point; and I can't work out what soccer has to do with it. Do mothers play soccer much in the USA? Football (as the 95% of the world's population that aren't either English-speaking North Americans or else Rugby fans call the Beautiful Game) is associated in my mind with young men, specifically working class men. It's connotations are entirely macho, even violent. When a big match is on men gather in pubs and bars and shout at TVs whilst knocking back the lager. You avoid the centre of town if you don't want to risk getting involved in a fight. People get *killed* at football matches. That's pretty much true in every big city inthe world outside North America (and Japan where the fans are polite). This honestly isn't a troll - I am in fact bewildered by the phrase. Ken Brown