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Skywatch
September 2008
The Big Shake-Up
“’My country, right or wrong’ is a thing that no true patriot
would think of saying… It is like saying ‘My mother, drunk or sober.’”
-- G. K. Chesterton
This month the Saturn-Uranus opposition officially goes into orb.
After the Equinox (9/22 8:46 am PDT) the transit’s impact on humanity
will become stronger and stronger, and its worldly parallels more and
more obvious. So will its impact on the metabolic, mental and emotional
bodies of individuals. This is the most important mundane transit of
the rest of the calendar year, and our goal should be to mine it for
understanding.
Saturn governs social structures as well as personal ones. It
is associated with the bourgeois mindset, relative to whatever culture
we're looking at. Class-wise, it encompasses the values of neither the
very high nor the very low; neither the extreme Left nor Right. It is the
planet of the status quo, whose premier vices, as Adam Gopnick reminds
us, are hypocrisy and homogenization.1
But Saturn is now staring down the barrel of Uranus, the planet
of revolution.
Saturn-Uranus in historical
context
Though the human desire for stasis leads us to characterize disruptive
historical periods (such as this one) as flukish and dangerous, the
symbolism of astrology tells us otherwise. We are looking at a cyclic
phenomenon no weirder and no less predictable than the monthly Full Moon.
Just a bit more infrequent, and a tad more intense.
When Uranus and Saturn opposed in the 1920s all hell broke loose
in a different way, as Europe staggered to its feet from World War I
and the American social fabric was rent by giddy economic and sexual upheaval.
The time after that, the Saturn-Uranus cycle reached opposition
in the mid-sixties – a period that changed the world with sex, drugs,
and rock & roll. What will the current iteration of this transit
bring? We know only one thing for certain: its purpose is to destabilize
the cherished complacency of the Normal.
The men who would be king
In the USA the transit will play out during the presidential campaign,
the election itself and its immediate aftermath. Astrologers of a Jungian
persuasion will be watching the candidates mutate from ordinary human
beings into mythic figures, a perspective that is very helpful if one wants
to avoid getting snookered into the cults of personality encouraged --
and to a large extent, engendered -- by the American media.
In the mystical view, personages rise to this degree of public
prominence only because they embody certain energies that the collective
needs to see acted out. At this point Obama and McCain have ceased to
be mere human beings; they are mile-high collective projections, spawned
by the mass mind. They are our demi-gods, fashioned in our image. From
them Americans can learn much about ourselves as a group.
As they must do to stay in business, the two ruling political
parties in the USA have fashioned favorite sons – one geriatric and
paternal, one charming and youthful -- who are both tucking themselves
safely within the boundaries of Saturnian guidelines. If we were to watch
the big election show from a systemic point of view rather than allowing
the media to frame the narrative for us, we would see very clearly the
archetypes at play. This could keep us grounded and lucid when the Saturn-Uranus
opposition comes to fullness.
In what ways do these gentlemen both represent Saturn?
Duopoly
The Democratic and Republican Parties constitute a duopoly, designed
to bolster the interests of the agencies that fund them. Each of their
leaders has made it clear that they fully intend to maintain the occupations
of Iraq and Afghanistan, eagerly (McCain) or reluctantly (Obama) attack Iran,
and -- may the Goddess preserve us -- clamber up on the latest bandwagon
to revive the Cold War with Russia4. Both parties are righteously
intent upon funding the horror in Israel-occupied Palestine. Indeed,
both are committed to spending $600 billion each year so that the Pentagon
can maintain its 700 military bases in 130 countries all over the world.
Neither candidate is saying a peep about America’s multi-trillion-dollar
debt nor the fatal weakness of the dollar. Neither dares address the
role of insurance companies in the disaster that is American healthcare.
Neither will touch the supremacy of corporate power that is the cornerstone
of Ralph Nader’s argument for change; neither sees the necessity to submit
the current administration to the rule of law as Dennis Kucinich is doing;
neither challenges the official story of 9/11 as has Green candidate Cynthia
McKinney.
Bush-Redux vs. Bush-Lite
McCain was for many years the premier father figure on the political
landscape. Before he was running for president he was widely revered
for his perceived integrity, getting into shouting matches with Dick
Cheney over the issue of torture,2 a subject with which
he was highly respected for being all-too-closely familiar. Obama was
a progressive darling in those heady days before he was the nominee-presumptive.
Since then, the Senator’s increasingly whole-hearted embrace of the fundamentally
irrational “war on terror” (most egregiously, his plan to pour more blood
and money into the hellish bog of Afghanistan, where casualty rates
have surpassed Iraq's) has him out-Saturning McCain; the young king usurping
the old. The American public now faces a contest between Bush-Redux and
Bush-Lite.
Saturn governs tradition and the past verities that shore it
up. Obama’s Saturnization process has involved choosing as his advisor
Cold War architect Zbigniew Brzezinski from the Carter years3.
He has hinted that he will retain Bush’s choice for Defense Secretary,
Robert Gates. He has been repeating the same simplistic non-analysis of
the Soviet-Georgia conflict that the White House has been churning out.
He has, in short, become the representative of only as much “change” as
mainstream America can tolerate.
But the planets do not fall for rhetoric and charm, and Uranus
knows a bourgeois when it sees one. We can expect lightning bolts to
take aim at more than one target over the next few months.
Systemic decay
In the world of organic systems, where there is systemic decay
one does not expect solutions to arise from within the system itself.
As common-sensible as this idea seems, somehow it is a little harder to
fathom when the subject is our own governmental, financial and civic institutions;
our attachment to which prevents us from copping a perspective. But universal
forces don’t care how attached we are. The laws of stasis-maintenance
(Saturn), breakthrough (Uranus) and renewal (Pluto) still apply.
It is Uranus that governs change; a word now being as ubiquitously
and meaninglessly touted in American discourse as the word democracy
was just before the invasion of Iraq. But true Uranian change is the stuff
of revolutions: whether bloody or bloodless, whether military or cultural,
these cannot derive from the institutions already in place. They are by
definition threatening to the powers-that-be.
When thinking about the opposition building above, we need to
remember that Uranus is more powerful than Saturn. In any contest between
them, Uranus will win. And if Uranian change does not and cannot come from
the status quo, where does it come from? As history unerringly reminds us,
it comes from The People themselves.
To be continued next month.
__________________
Notes:
1 The New Yorker, July 7 and 14, 2008
2 According to one of his advisers, McCain once said that
negotiating about torture with Cheney “was like negotiating bank reform
with Bonnie and Clyde.”
3 This was the team that covertly armed Afghan mujahedeen --
effectively inventing the Taliban -- six months before the Soviets
invaded; a fact that the Democratic White House baldly denied.
4 A coveted oil route lies behind this latest
misadventure, a fact anyone could guess unless they'd
been hiding under a rock in regards to American foreign policy for
the past 15 years (or listening to the news on TV, which amounts to the
same thing). Georgia is a major oil transit point for all
of Central Asia. The noble victim in Washington’s story, President Saakashvili,
is the fellow who sent 2,000 of his country’s young men to help Uncle Sam
occupy Iraq. Generously armed by the Pentagon, whose Special Forces, along
with Israeli advisers and mercenary contractors, direct the Georgian military,
Saakashvili held joint exercises with the US Army and Marines this past
July, a detail strangely omitted from the official narrative. While the
US media spins the episode as an unprovoked attack by the big bad Russian
Bear, little mention is made of the episode that called the tanks in: Georgia’s
earlier invasion of the tiny autonomous region of South Ossetia, in which
civilians and Russian peacekeeping troops were killed; an invasion that
was undoubtedly greenlighted by Washington. Meanwhile the Cheney team
has been busy pushing to get Georgia into NATO,* and placing anti-Russian
missile bases in Poland and the Czech Republic in flagrant
disregard of the wishes and interests of the overwhelming majority of
those populaces.
* Now would be a good time for Americans to remember that NATO
was established as an anti-USSR military alliance aimed at preventing
popular uprisings in the colonial powers of Europe weakened by World War
II. Then, as now, from an archetypal point of view the much-decried ruthlessness
of the Kremlin mirrors nose-to-nose that of Washington. The Russian army’s
incursions into sovereign nations echo those of the Pentagon; the KGB
(where Putin got his training) mirrors the CIA (whose modern face was
established by Bush Sr).
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