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Man in Space
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Post by Man in Space »

Raphael wrote: Wed Oct 02, 2024 7:34 am Random serious question: How has the Catholic Church in the USA traditionally handled the fact that in that country, there were Catholics of different ethnic backgrounds, sometimes living closely together? Were there ever separate churches for, say, Irish, Italians, and Poles? I mean, aside from the basic effect of ethnically segregated neighbourhoods?
At least in Cleveland, I want to say that you can find both mixed and separate congregations—though the only ones I can confirm offhand are Orthodox (there’s a Ukrainian Orthodox cathedral near one of the McDonald’s I used to patronize while my Babcia was alive), but something tells me I’ve seen specific Catholic churches before.
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Post by Raphael »

Man in Space wrote: Wed Oct 02, 2024 10:01 am At least in Cleveland, I want to say that you can find both mixed and separate congregations—though the only ones I can confirm offhand are Orthodox (there’s a Ukrainian Orthodox cathedral near one of the McDonald’s I used to patronize while my Babcia was alive), but something tells me I’ve seen specific Catholic churches before.
Thank you!
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Man in Space
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Raphael wrote: Wed Oct 02, 2024 10:04 amThank you!
You’re welcome!

Some useless ancillary trivia: My sister used to have trouble pronouncing “Catholic” when she was younger, so one of the churches we would drive by got nicknamed the “Half-a-Church”. This was extended when another underwent renovations and became the “Build-a-Church” to us.
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Post by Travis B. »

I'm used to Orthodox churches being more explicitly ethnic than Catholic churches, with the ethnicity of Catholic churches being more a function of which neighborhood in which they are situated. However, take that with a grain of salt, as I have only been in Catholic churches for weddings and funerals.
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My experience with Catholics in the USA is that they're Catholics first when it comes to what congregation they'll join, unless a specific church is the only one that has certain masses in specific languages. If you have Hispanic Catholics and English only speaking Catholics, and one church has Spanish masses as well as English, and another church only has English masses, then the one with Spanish mass is going to attract more Spanish speakers. But if for some reason someone can't make their normal mass and/or are closer to the other church, they might go to the other rather than not go to church at all. (Both may or may not have Latin masses but Latin mass has become a bit rare that I've seen. That said, my experiences were only direct until I was about 16 and indirect through family the last 20 years).
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Man in Space
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Over dinner this evening, my mother reminded me of the existence of a certain iconic local television skit.

Up in Cleveland, the local B-movie presenter Ghoulardi (Ernie Anderson, the same one from The Love Boat and Saget-era America’s Funniest Home Videos) was extremely popular. Despite only being active in the role for a handful of years in the early ’60s, his Ghoulardi is still referenced to this day. There have been some successors: The (late) Ron Sweed, “The Ghoul”, a crewman on the project who became an ascended fanboy with permission from Anderson himself; some bloke called “Son of Ghoul”, about whom I know little because he wasn’t on our local broadcast channels; and Svengoolie, who has seen reasonable success are likely the most well-known examples.

One of Anderson’s Ghoulardi crew was a guy named Chuck Schodowsky. He went on to sort of fill the niche that Ghoulardi had occupied, though he went about it a little differently. Regardless, a local weatherman named Houlihan ended up joining him, making it Big Chuck and Houlihan the Weather Man. Houlihan departed at some point and was succeeded by John Rinaldi. Rinaldi is a little person and Schodowsky is tall himself, so they naturally became Big Chuck and L’il John.

They were active until fairly recently, still hosting shows. When I was in high school, my family and I were on it once. (My father also appeared on the Ghoul’s show once thanks to someone spotting his and his friend’s Halloween costumes and Sweed writing a bit about it.) I’ve met them, and once, when I was in college, I wrote a letter to Big Chuck, and I came back from a trip across the state shortly thereafter to find a very nice handwritten reply.

They worked with a number of others—mundane, famous, and infamous; local or not—to various degrees. (The now late) Dick Goddard, a legend of local weather reporting, was a frequent collaborator (I sort-of met him too once; freshman year one of the band shows got rained out, so they put us all in this cramped, half-size gym and had us do the show in there. I was on the drumline, and in our opener, we had to modify one of the formations due to the space issues, and I basically ended up catty-corner to Goddard by less than 10 feet), as was Art Lafredo, and—yes, really—the notorious Dr. Robert J. White. Lafredo is relevant here.

Some of their skits have aged poorly, but most of them haven’t. Perhaps their most well-known skit (and my favorite of theirs) was “Chase”. Lafredo is the motorcycle cop, and the other two should be obvious.
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Re: Random Thread

Post by Civil War Bugle »

Raphael wrote: Wed Oct 02, 2024 7:34 am Random serious question: How has the Catholic Church in the USA traditionally handled the fact that in that country, there were Catholics of different ethnic backgrounds, sometimes living closely together? Were there ever separate churches for, say, Irish, Italians, and Poles? I mean, aside from the basic effect of ethnically segregated neighbourhoods?
I don’t have a citation handy but my impression is that it used to be relatively common, say a hundred years ago or so, for the bishops to take ethnicity into account when engaging in their canon law duty of drawing parish boundaries or whatever, but that something or other induced a shift towards purely geographic boundaries in modern times when there isn’t a compelling reason to do otherwise. My vague impression is that back in the day, the Irish did very well for themselves in the American Catholic hierarchy and that there was some resentment about this among other ethnic groups, and if I’m not totally making this all up off of misremembered stuff, I imagine a combination of that plus revisions to canon law plus the vibes of Vatican II were responsible for the current organization of parishes.
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Civil War Bugle wrote: Fri Oct 04, 2024 6:40 pm

I don’t have a citation handy but my impression is that it used to be relatively common, say a hundred years ago or so, for the bishops to take ethnicity into account when engaging in their canon law duty of drawing parish boundaries or whatever, but that something or other induced a shift towards purely geographic boundaries in modern times when there isn’t a compelling reason to do otherwise. My vague impression is that back in the day, the Irish did very well for themselves in the American Catholic hierarchy and that there was some resentment about this among other ethnic groups, and if I’m not totally making this all up off of misremembered stuff, I imagine a combination of that plus revisions to canon law plus the vibes of Vatican II were responsible for the current organization of parishes.
Thank you!
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I just learned from the latest issue of the local paper that there are apparently nutrias near where I live now. (I don't live anywhere near South America.) And they're suspected of undermining the nearby dikes with their burrows. This is worrying, especially now that flooding season is starting.
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Raphael wrote: Sat Oct 05, 2024 9:01 am I just learned from the latest issue of the local paper that there are apparently nutrias near where I live now. (I don't live anywhere near South America.) And they're suspected of undermining the nearby dikes with their burrows. This is worrying, especially now that flooding season is starting.
I saw a nutria by the side of the road once. I couldn't tell what it was at the time - a round-tailed beaver? a huge, dark, wet groundhog? It was only later that I learned we have them.
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Raphael
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This thread on Bluesky by Brad Devereaux may be interesting to some people here. Basically, he pushes back on the idea that "if magic were common, it would be industrialized":

https://bsky.app/profile/bretdevereaux. ... 2dp2hb6p2n
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Raphael wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:07 am This thread on Bluesky by Brad Devereaux may be interesting to some people here. Basically, he pushes back on the idea that "if magic were common, it would be industrialized":

https://bsky.app/profile/bretdevereaux. ... 2dp2hb6p2n
Dammit, lost a whole post here. I'll see if I can reconstruct.

Devereaux's point seems to be that a premodern craftsman was too shaky in theory to be able to exploit anything in nature, much less magic. Their theories were bad, and their practice was hobbled by bad measurement and inconsistent materials.

I'm sympathetic to his idea, as I don't like magic-as-science systems. I think magic should be weird and personal, not consistent and mechanical.

But I don't really agree with his reasoning. E.g. he cites Pliny-- who was not a craftsman but a writer, soldier, and member of the elite. He is not necessarily a guide to Roman engineers at their best. And their metallurgy and achitecture, at least, were pretty good. Magic exploited at the same level would be at least as useful.

Beyond that, I think he goes astray because he's a classicist, not a medievalist. The medievals far exceeded the Romans in chemistry, navigation, millwork, glasswares, clockwork, and war. By 1350 they had the compass, handheld guns, cannons, better horse transport (Roman collars choked the horse), spectacles, working clocks, spinning wheels, to say nothing of positional numeral notation and algebra. China had much of this centuries earlier. Again, if magic was indeed consistent and exploitable, medieval craftsmen would be able to exploit it as well as they did all these things.
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zompist wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 5:26 am Beyond that, I think he goes astray because he's a classicist, not a medievalist. The medievals far exceeded the Romans in chemistry, navigation, millwork, glasswares, clockwork, and war. By 1350 they had the compass, handheld guns, cannons, better horse transport (Roman collars choked the horse), spectacles, working clocks, spinning wheels, to say nothing of positional numeral notation and algebra. China had much of this centuries earlier. Again, if magic was indeed consistent and exploitable, medieval craftsmen would be able to exploit it as well as they did all these things.
I think the point is that even they didn’t get particularly close to our modern understanding of the world, though. Alchemy is better than what the Romans had, and much more systematised, but it’s hardly as principled as modern chemistry is. Similarly, a medieval-esque magic system might have some systematicity, but it’s hardly the ‘hard magic’ so beloved of modern fantasy.

(I do have a weakness for ‘hard magic’, it must be admitted. Probably because I’m a physicist. But it belongs in the modern world, not in medieval times. I just read Poul Anderson’s Operation Chaos, and that got it right by placing the (re)discovery of magic firmly after the invention of relativity and quantum mechanics.)
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Post by Ares Land »

Raphael wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 4:07 am This thread on Bluesky by Brad Devereaux may be interesting to some people here. Basically, he pushes back on the idea that "if magic were common, it would be industrialized":

https://bsky.app/profile/bretdevereaux. ... 2dp2hb6p2n
That's very interesting, indeed. One obvious conworlding idea is to have a perfectly logical and 'scientific' magic system, except only the author knows the rules. Wizards, in that conworld, would do magic without any real understanding of the underlying system.

Devereaux's point, I guess, is that wizards would do very impressive things with magic (much like medieval builders and blacksmiths were impressive) but wouldn't systematize it or launch a magical industrial revolution. This works for medieval-ish fantasy... though not for, say, Harry Potter. (Of course some bright wizard would try and build a theory of magic, or run experiments.)

I'm an engineer... though what I do at work often feels like witchcraft. Or black magic, on a bad day. It rarely feels like science. That's because I'm in IT, though -- I don't handle things at the level electrons are being pushed around; I'm dealing with other engineers' software -- so most of the time I'm dealing with their quirks, weird interactions between pieces of code, and the occasional bug.
I wonder how it is in other fields... How much of an aeronautics' engineeer job is pure, rational science, and how much of it is fiddling around the quirks of AutoCAD, or dealing with the engine manufacturer's weird ideas?
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Post by malloc »

Part it really depends on what magic actually means and how it differs from physics. If magic is simply an alternative physics, then it makes sense that people would eventually find ways to systematize and industrialize it. On the other hand, if magic follows fundamentally different principles and logic than physics, it may well prove difficult or impossible to control systematically.
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Ares Land wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 10:08 am I'm an engineer... though what I do at work often feels like witchcraft. Or black magic, on a bad day. It rarely feels like science. That's because I'm in IT, though -- I don't handle things at the level electrons are being pushed around; I'm dealing with other engineers' software -- so most of the time I'm dealing with their quirks, weird interactions between pieces of code, and the occasional bug.
I wonder how it is in other fields... How much of an aeronautics' engineeer job is pure, rational science, and how much of it is fiddling around the quirks of AutoCAD, or dealing with the engine manufacturer's weird ideas?
Agreed. I am a software engineer, and the vast majority of my do does not sound like what people call "science" -- it is largely futzing with code to get it to work well enough that I can be sufficiently happy with it. While initially there may be a good deal of rational design to things, that quickly goes away as "no plan survives contact with the enemy" and often degenerates to mere trial and error. In many cases I am just guessing until I come upon something that (mostly) works; for instance, this was the case with my single-precision floating point string (to and from) conversion routines.
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Post by Travis B. »

Welp, the Google HR department has taken over Python. Probably the only option at this point is to fork Python, sans CoC and "Steering Committee"...
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Post by Travis B. »

Yeah, it's time to fork Python.
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Travis B. wrote: Fri Oct 11, 2024 1:53 pm Yeah, it's time to fork Python.
Good luck.
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OK, I'll speak as a grumpy old Millennial who grew up in a time before influencers now: Back then, of course we had celebrities who got paid to sell stuff, but I don't think there were many celebrities whose entire celebrity status was based on them selling stuff (unless you count corporate mascots as celebrities). Do I get this right that that's what today's influencers are?
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