We’re rapidly approaching one of two major turning points in Pluto’s passage of Capricorn, from a galactic perspective.
On April 6, 2010, Pluto, powerhouse of the solar system, comes to its
retrograde station exactly atop a Black Hole, powerhouse of the cosmos.
At 5 Capricorn, the station opposes the USA’s Jupiter exactly, also
opposed the USA Venus at 3 Cancer, which between them straddle another
Black Hole at 4 Cancer. It also exactly squares a manifestation-evoking
Quasar at 5 Libra. This Black Hole/Quasar combination, linked to two
planets regulating financial matters in the USA chart, suggests
dramatic, sweeping change and pervasive, lasting manifestations of it,
keyed on the USA financial sector and the economy generally. Whether
this will result in the reimposition of key banking regulations such as
Glass-Steagall (separating commercial from investment banking) which
were allowed to lapse under the Clinton administration, or another
financial crisis, spurring a second plunge into a “double dip” recession
(or both) is uncertain.
When Pluto stations, its powers of transformation and change are
enhanced and concentrated on one particular degree of the zodiac,
providing a magnified window of its most extreme effects which lasts
roughly 18 months, until Pluto turns direct once more at the same, or
similar, degree. In this case, the associated direct station is actually
at 4 Capricorn (the degree at which this Black Hole appears in the
psyches of anyone born before 1992), and occurs in September 2011. Once
Pluto finally passes from the current degree of the singularity on 23
November 2011, we’ll begin to see the light at the end of this Black
Hole tunnel (though its orb will continue to impact Pluto until 2013).
Pluto passing over a Black Hole is bad enough, but when stationing
conjoined its singularity, or center, Pluto’s natural tendency to shake
up the status quo is dramatically magnified, increased tenfold,
and for a greatly extended period. Pluto, which rules change and
transformation, also governs such things as reproduction and genetics;
huge expenditures or waste; nuclear power and weaponry; terrorism,
genocide and war; scandals, secrets, and their disclosure; evolution and
species extinction; and decay and death.
The most turbulent Pluto/Black Hole station in recent memory was that
of March 22, 2003, exactly atop the Black Hole at 19 Sagittarius, which
fell just three days after the US-led invasion of Iraq, a conflict
which is still ongoing, and has cost the country in excess of $706
billion in direct costs, with associated expenditures in support and
follow-up care for veterans estimated to exceed $2 trillion. Add to that
cost the almost 4300 dead US servicemembers and more than 30,000
wounded, to say nothing of the Iraqi dead, possibly more than 100,000,
and we see a Plutonian boondoggle of truly enormous Black Hole
proportions.
To add insult to injury, it was at the time of Pluto’s backhand
station direct conjunct this same anomaly, 18
months later on August 30,
2004, that the final US report on Iraq’s supposed WMDs, the casus belli of
the invasion, revealed that no evidence for them could be found, and
all that blood and treasure had been spent for nothing. This report was
released 16 September 2004, two weeks after the station. Earlier, on
August 24, the Schlesinger Report disclosed that the abuses at Abu
Ghraib prison were the result of “fundamental failures throughout all
levels of command,” not the work of a few aberrant soldiers. These
abuses, involving torture and sexual humiliation, are directly governed
in Pluto’s bailiwick.
When Pluto subsequently made a retrograde station at 26 Sagittarius
conjunct the supermassive Black Hole at the Galactic Center, on 29 March
2006, world events clustering about this station included the 22
February bombing of Samarra’s Golden Mosque, Shia Islam’s holiest
shrine, which resulted in major escalations of sectarian violence in
Iraq. Also included was George W. Bush’s March 9th signing of
a renewal of the USA PATRIOT Act, along with an accompanying signing
statement stating that he did not consider himself bound by its
requirement to inform Congress how the law was being applied. Finally,
the 11 April announcement by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that
his country had successfully enriched uranium, a key step on the road to
becoming a nuclear power, is included in this cluster. Earlier stations
bear out Pluto’s tendency to evoke extreme manifestations, particularly
involving areas it governs, when in conjunction with Black Holes.
A retrograde station on the Black Hole at 10 Sagittarius on March 13,
1999 coincided with the release of important NASA data verifying global
warming, potentially responsible for another pending mass extinction
such as Pluto rules, when they confirmed an annual three-foot loss in
the Greenland ice shelf. Just eleven days later the NATO-led Operation
Allied Force began bombing raids on Milosevic’s Yugoslavia in an effort
to end his support for genocidal atrocities and ethnic cleansing in
Kosovo. When Pluto subsequently turned direct at the same anomaly on
August 20, 2000, it was just three days before the National Institutes
of Health approved federal funding for embryonic stem cell research,
which has the potential to cure countless diseases, Pluto governing
biologic processes on the cellular level.
In a similar incident, when Pluto stationed retrograde conjoined the
Black Hole at 5 Sagittarius on March 8, 1997, it was accompanied by a
federal ban on human cloning, signed by Bill Clinton on March 4, and the
first cross-adoption of their children by a lesbian couple in New York
on March 7, an early harbinger of the gay marriage rights controversy
which has since enveloped the nation, and significant in light of
Pluto’s rulership of sexual matters and taboo. Weeks later, on 27 March,
Marshall Applewhite’s Heaven’s Gate cult committed mass suicide at
Rancho Santa Fe, California, a nod to both the self-destruction aspects
of Pluto and its first Black Hole station conjunction in
religious-philosophy-ruling Sagittarius.
Eighteen months later on 15 August 1998, when Pluto again stationed
on this point, Clinton was back in the news, on a more personal level,
with his August 17 confession to the nation of his affair with Monica
Lewinsky. Terrorism, another Plutonian arena, was also highlighted, with
the August 7 bombing of the American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania,
and the USA’s retaliatory response on al Qaeda training bases in Sudan
and Afghanistan on August 20. These incidents were among the first
warning shots of al Qaeda’s war on America, and a root cause of the Bush
administration’s Global War on Terrorism, with ramifications to this
day.
The previous cycle of Pluto/Black Hole stations dates back to the
late ‘80s, with the retrograde station of 8 February 1986 on the Black
Hole at 7 Scorpio eliciting the fall of two dictators (also
Pluto-ruled), Haiti’s “president for life” Jean-Claude Duvalier, who
fled the country on February 7; and the Philippines’ Ferdinand Marcos,
who rigged the February 7 election to defeat Corazon Aquino, only to be
ousted in a military coup on February 26. In a surreal pairing of Pluto
(death) and Sagittarius (exploration), America watched in horror as the
space shuttle Challenger exploded on live TV just minutes after take-off
on 28 January, killing the crew of seven.
When Pluto turned direct at 7 Scorpio on 17 July 1987, it was in the
midst of the Iran-Contra investigation, the biggest scandal of the
Reagan administration, featuring Colonel Oliver North, who testified
that his actions had been approved by higher authorities, namely,
National Security Advisor John Poindexter, who authorized the use of
Iran arms sales profits to aid Contra rebels in Nicaragua, and Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who admitted to officially-sanctioned
deception and intrigue.
Sometimes Pluto’s actions at station do not appear to be
earth-shattering, their importance only noted much later. Such is the
case with the 24 June 1978 direct station of Pluto on the Black Hole at
13 Libra, preceded shortly by the June 18 incorporation of the
Whitewater business venture, an Arkansas sweetheart real estate deal
gone wrong which would lead to investigations eventually resulting in
the impeachment of Bill Clinton in the US House of Representatives, 20
years later.
On 11 June 1973, Pluto stationed direct conjunct the supermassive
Black Hole center of Galaxy M-87 at 1 Libra. Just two weeks later, White
House Counsel John Dean testified to Richard Nixon’s complicity in the
Watergate cover-up, in congressional proceedings which ultimately
brought down that presidency. The prior direct station of Pluto on a
Black Hole, occurring 21 May 1963 at 9 Virgo, witnessed the height of
racial tensions in the American south, with federal troops enforcing the
integration of the University of Alabama on June 11, and the
assassination of civil rights leader Medgar Evers in Jackson,
Mississippi the following day. Another far-reaching consequence of that
station was the May 28 initial offering of common stock in the Dow Jones
Stock Exchange to the public, which has led us to this point of average
Americans heavily invested in the ups and downs of Wall Street.
Investments are also an Eighth House/Plutonian matter.
Pluto’s first Black Hole station post-World War II fell on 8 December
1959, just after the December 1 transmission of the first color photo
of Earth from space, a symbolic event noted for its concurrence with a
growing understanding of our planet as one whole, an interdependent
eco-system, at once fragile and enduring, and the realization that we
have it within our power to preserve or destroy it.
This station in April affects one of two Black Holes in Capricorn,
the other at the 19 Capricorn, which Pluto will first conjoin in the
spring of 2017. These two points mark periods of peak change and
transition, as Pluto scours governmental, business, and financial
structures in its quest to break down old, obsolete forms, so that
newer, more enlightened systems may emerge. How painful this transition
becomes is directly proportional to the resistance to change which Pluto
encounters, embodied in the death throes of the old forms, and our
willingness to embrace and enact needed reforms. We can see glimmers of
where the major problems are, which battlegrounds will be chosen, and
what the ultimate outcomes will be, by looking closely at current
conditions and trends.
Neptune appears to be working in tandem with Pluto during this
earlier period of his Capricorn passage, while it conjoins the nation’s
natal Moon placement at 26 Aquarius, representing the housing market
(associated with Capricorn through its polar opposite sign of Cancer),
the sector from which the current financial crisis first emerged. As
Pluto transforms and reinvents the financial community, represented by
Capricorn, Neptune’s conjunction with the USA Moon has seen a dramatic
erosion (Neptune) in home values. An estimated 5 million home (Moon)
mortgages are predicted to be “underwater” (Neptune) in 2010, meaning
that they are worth less than 75% of the value of the mortgages their
owners owe on them. Forecasts of 3 million foreclosures, higher than the
2009 figure, could indicate a second crisis in the housing sector which
sends the economy into a tailspin. Mortgages, as borrowed money, fall
under Pluto’s purview, so its repeat use of this facilitating expedient
in breaking down the economic status quo seems likely.
Also under the Plutonian surgeon’s knife will be governmental
structures. In this regard, it’s easy to understand the surging
popularity of the populist, conservative Tea Party movement. Although
too narrowly defined, and misguided in many respects, its underlying
message of “back to basics” in government squares well with Pluto’s
Capricorn agenda. Indeed, the Tea Party, though not officially
constituted, fared better in public approval polling in December 2009
than either Democrats or Republicans.
Another issue Pluto’s Capricorn sojourn seems to be pointing up is
the ineffectiveness of Congress. Even with the White House, strong
majorities in the House, and until recently, a super-majority of 60 in
the Senate, the Democrats seem incapable of passing legislation or
governing. Pluto is emphasizing the need for change in governmental
structures, if only extending to a rewriting, or even due enactment, of
the rules governing our legislative bodies. The main problem seems to be
the Senate filibuster, and the entrenched Republican minority which
refuses to allow anything to be passed without 60 votes in favor,
requiring the Dems to hang together and present a united front
(something the Party has never been noted for) if they are to accomplish
anything.
Proposals to end the filibuster, an important legislative tool, seem
short-sighted and fraught with potential disaster; after all, the Dems
won’t be in the majority forever (perhaps not even after the next
election), and discarding the filibuster in haste could well be
something they repent of in long legislative leisure. Better to actually
enforce the rule. The filibuster has become not an actual procedure,
but a threat of this procedure, according to a deal worked out
between the rival parties in the late ‘90s whereby the actual filibuster
is bypassed in favor of a cloture vote, to end discussion on a bill and
bring it to the floor. If Party leaders surmise they cannot reach the
necessary 60 votes for cloture, the legislation is dropped, without the
enactment of the actual filibuster. If the minority were forced to
actually drag out the cots and maintain a quorum for days of reading the
phone book, all televised nationally, their obstructionism would become
apparent, support for their tactics would erode, and some actual work
might get done.
Other proposals for initiating change in our governmental processes
include abolition of the archaic Electoral College, and electing
presidents via popular vote alone; and, in direct contrast (Black Hole
energies often eliciting polar opposite responses), no longer electing
Senators by popular vote. The last idea is an intriguing one, based in
an attempt to reduce corporate lobbyist influence in Senate campaigns.
Originally, and until the early twentieth century, Senators were not
elected by the people, but chosen by state legislatures. The proposal to
return to this system would bring political bribery and graft back
where it belongs, to the State Houses, more subject to local interests,
and subsequently reduce the influence of big money, multinational
corporations and special interests, whose efforts would be spread across
50 states and not concentrated in Washington.
Regardless of how these various proposals thrive or are defeated, the
very fact of them indicates a restlessness and discontent with the
current forms governing our society, fertile breeding ground for Pluto
to make its changes. And the 18 months ensuing from Pluto’s Black Hole
station in April 2010 will be a prime time to enact reforms, or face the
consequences of inaction.Source here
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