06-01-2007, 12:27 PM
I ran across this post and thought it was interesting. I keep seeing stories that the economy is going to collapse soon and this person feel it was start this month.
We're done with SuperMoons and eclipses for a few months, but don't let that lull you into complacency. It's true that the May 16 SuperMoon was the last of its kind until the fall, and there won't be another eclipse until the end of August. However there are many kinds of extreme moons, of which SuperMoons and eclipses are only a couple of the more notable varieties. As it turns out, there are several such potent soli-lunar factors afoot in June; at the beginning, middle and end of the month. These are times of extreme lunar activation in their own right: the full moons at the beginning and end of the month are within a day of the Moon's south declination extreme (greatest distance south of the equator), while the new moon on the 15th is within hours of the Moon's maximum north declination (greatest distance north of the equator). What this means is that June will have more than its share of powerful storms and seismic activity - more, probably, than last month. Details follow. But first . . .
square to Uranus back on May 11, which remains within a few degrees of exact until mid-June; and gets a kick from the Uranus retrograde station on the 23rd. Likewise Neptune's retrograde station on May 24: the gas giant spends all of June within less than a degree of its station point last month. And then there's the biggie: the third and final instance of the current Saturn-Neptune opposition series, detailed in my 2006 and 2007 forecasts. It's exact on June 25, and stays within a few degrees of precise alignment well into July.
The Jupiter-Uranus square and the Saturn-Neptune opposition were both in effect at the same time last month, and in January and February: look back, check out the major market swoons in both time frames, and you'll get an idea what to expect this month. Think stock market drops, currency panics and the like. Be ready. For more on this, see my forecast for the year as a whole. And remember: this isn't some 1929-style crash. (It's a new kind of crash, a settling of the soufflé that takes years.) Think "how the mighty hath fallen" and look for bargains amidst the debris. (Think political debris too.) Don't make a fetish of exact dates, since these are slow cosmic functions and they're not far from exact for a good part (if not all) of the month. There may be peak moments around the 25th, but this is one of those situations where we're within one snowflake of an avalanche just about the whole month long. And the Uranus factor suggests that the tipping factor can come from the most unexpected quarters.
http://www.astropro.com/homeIE45.html
We're done with SuperMoons and eclipses for a few months, but don't let that lull you into complacency. It's true that the May 16 SuperMoon was the last of its kind until the fall, and there won't be another eclipse until the end of August. However there are many kinds of extreme moons, of which SuperMoons and eclipses are only a couple of the more notable varieties. As it turns out, there are several such potent soli-lunar factors afoot in June; at the beginning, middle and end of the month. These are times of extreme lunar activation in their own right: the full moons at the beginning and end of the month are within a day of the Moon's south declination extreme (greatest distance south of the equator), while the new moon on the 15th is within hours of the Moon's maximum north declination (greatest distance north of the equator). What this means is that June will have more than its share of powerful storms and seismic activity - more, probably, than last month. Details follow. But first . . .
square to Uranus back on May 11, which remains within a few degrees of exact until mid-June; and gets a kick from the Uranus retrograde station on the 23rd. Likewise Neptune's retrograde station on May 24: the gas giant spends all of June within less than a degree of its station point last month. And then there's the biggie: the third and final instance of the current Saturn-Neptune opposition series, detailed in my 2006 and 2007 forecasts. It's exact on June 25, and stays within a few degrees of precise alignment well into July.
The Jupiter-Uranus square and the Saturn-Neptune opposition were both in effect at the same time last month, and in January and February: look back, check out the major market swoons in both time frames, and you'll get an idea what to expect this month. Think stock market drops, currency panics and the like. Be ready. For more on this, see my forecast for the year as a whole. And remember: this isn't some 1929-style crash. (It's a new kind of crash, a settling of the soufflé that takes years.) Think "how the mighty hath fallen" and look for bargains amidst the debris. (Think political debris too.) Don't make a fetish of exact dates, since these are slow cosmic functions and they're not far from exact for a good part (if not all) of the month. There may be peak moments around the 25th, but this is one of those situations where we're within one snowflake of an avalanche just about the whole month long. And the Uranus factor suggests that the tipping factor can come from the most unexpected quarters.
http://www.astropro.com/homeIE45.html