Talk:Three Moons Over Milford

I removed something about the daughter becoming Wiccan, changed to doing Witchcraft. First, her friends got the 'spell' from planetwicca.com, suggesting that one of the two others is, or simply silly girls doing things they don't really know much about. Second, it seemed that the actual 'spell' had casued nothing, rather, fire in a pot catched on something. Ghost Orgy 01:24, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Really not comprehending whatever it is you're trying to say. "Wicca" and "Wiccan" are used in the show, so that description is therefore correct.  Unless you're unsuccessfully trying to make a distinction between "wicca" and "witchcraft" and claiming that the activities as shown are the latter and not the former, you are wrong. Canonblack 02:48, 19 August 2006 (UTC)

The point being as such: Wicca is a religion, and common ceremonies consist of much more then cheesy rhymed words and an iron cauldron. Whereas, Witchcraft can be isolated from more religous occasions, and simply be what was done on the show. There is a distinct difference between the two, though both are done by some. The fact that it came from a website that has the word wicca in it means not much. Similarly, Wikipedia pronounced in a certain fashion sounds like "Wiccapedia", and, no connection there. Now is where I stop, as it would seem I'm starting to rant. I'll leave it to someone else to change. Ghost Orgy 03:48, 24 August 2006 (UTC)
 * Sorry, still not following your argument, or maybe you're not understanding my gist. The show uses the term "Wicca", therefore that is correct.  I have no idea what "the fact it came from a website that has the word wicca in it" is supposed to mean.  I never said I got any of my info from any website, I'm saying that the show uses the term "Wicca", so that would make it and not "witchcraft" the correct terminology.  The article is about a work of fiction; an extended debate over the differences or similarities between Wicca and witchcraft is completely irrelevant (although if the article expands to include other such analyses between situations and objects as depicted in the show and their real-life equivalents, then the Wicca/witchcraft dissection could be included — at this point it's just a stub, and you're introducing changes to programme details without explaining them in the article itself).  I never said that Wicca and witchcraft were the same thing.  The show also makes a point that the character is a practising Wiccan, not a dilettante playing around with something she read in a library book. Canonblack 04:27, 28 August 2006 (UTC)

In that case, I apologize for any trouble I may have caused. I suppose you would be correct, and I just wasn't reading your words correctly. Ghost Orgy 23:57, 29 August 2006 (UTC)