In his Age of Revolutions: Progress and Backlash from 1600 to the Present, historian/analyst Fareed Zakaria suggests that our current precarious situation in the U.S. (and in much of Europe) has its roots in the “hyper-globalization” of the 1990s and the deep economic fallout that followed from 2007-on.
This makes sense looking back: the 1990s were in large part consumed with the disintegration of the then-Soviet union and the transformation of former soviet republics into a more democracy-minded (or at least more free-market minded) Eastern European bloc.
And all of this unfolded in the midst of the "hyper-globalization" that Zakaria cites and in the very early days of two critical Saturn cycles:
--the Saturn-Uranus cycle that launched in the final degree of Sagittarius (within minutes of being in Capricorn) in February 1988, and
--the Saturn-Neptune cycle that kicked off roughly 11 degrees later in that same sign in March 1989.
Between both cycles, the corporate world was giddy with new found markets and new found Power-writ-large--often gained by tearing down corporate structures and "globalizing" them. Workers who were downsized, right-sized, replaced by the boundless availability of cheaper offshore labor or who lost their healthcare coverage in the mess that ensued were not so impressed.
As Zakaria (and others) have suggested, those heady late 1980s-early 1990s years paved the way for the turmoil and dysfunction of our times, and it's no coincidence that both of the Saturn cycles that took off in Capricorn now nearly 45 years ago are now in the waning days of their 3Q phases. Neptune is due to ingress Aries at the end of March 2025 and Saturn will catch up with it in February 2026 at 45 minutes into that sign; for its part, Uranus will enter Gemini in April 2026 and will shortly after begin returning to its radix Sibly position of 8+Gemini, a transit that could very well coincide with volatile times, especially involving workers, the military and other 6th house issues.
So, even though it will take until June 2032 for Saturn and Uranus to complete their 1988 cycle and begin anew at 28+Gemini, we are likely to be feeling the impact of a volatile Saturn-Uranus 3Q phase in our everyday lives. Will this long stretch from now to 2032 coincide with the Trump regime's autocratic experiment? Unfortunately, the Saturn-Uranus cycle has been known in history to support (and perhaps even promote) this type of struggle, but the bottom line, as always, will be determined by how we choose to use the energies in play. Our 1770s Revolutionary War was fought during the fiery first quarter of an Aries Saturn-Uranus cycle, which King George III might have expected to favor his rule, but that cycle was what we made of it in the end. Planets don't care if we are free from tyranny--that's our job.
As for the fallout from the 2007-08 Stock Market crash and housing crisis that Zakaria alludes to above, the entire Obama administration (2009-2017) bridged that rough period with our current situation, and it inspired not only a race-related backlash, but also ended up scapegoating Barack Obama for the economic mess created by the preceding administration. And for not being able to resolve the wars that the prior administration launched in the wake of the 9/11/2001 attacks in New York city.
That “taint” of unresolved wars and economic crises, of course, spilled over on Biden in ways
both blatant and subtle. Biden finished what Obama was never quite able to
accomplish with the war in Afghanistan, but our pullout in August
2021—mandated by an agreement Trump made with the Taliban before
leaving office the first time—was shocking at best. Biden moved forward with a strong, pro-worker/middle class economic agenda and stronger climate
change-sensitive environmental
agenda than Obama was ever able to, but the corporate pushback
deepened greatly during Biden's administration and was undoubtedly one big reason the billionaire class came out strongly for another Trump administration. He would give them another tax break...Biden threatened to make them "pay their fair share." The nerve!
Bottom line, this support now amounts to an oligarchic vanguard that is poised to do Trump's bidding from day one and has financed an actual plan called Project 2025 that would not only destroy our democratic institutions, but it would also pull the rug out from under everyday Americans in everything from healthcare, social security and education to civil and reproductive rights, and it would turn back the clock on our collective response to the climate crisis.
It sounds dystopic, but the "blueprint" (as the Project people like to call it) lays it all out in black and white. The nation's purpose going forward--it's imagined "mandate"--would be to feed corporate profits above all else and to reward billionaire "fixers" who do the dirty work of streamlining our federal government into a lean/mean autocracy that answers only to Christian nationalist ideals. It'll be every man/woman/child for themselves: if you're not white, male and wealthy, you're expendable. You think the price of eggs was bad in recent times?
Perhaps the excesses of the corporate world should be no surprise to us at this moment: in fact, the concentration of Capricorn energy that focused the world around globalization in the 1980s and 90s has only been empowered and emboldened by Pluto's recently completed transit through billionaire happy Capricorn and especially by its transiting return to our national Sibly Pluto. Add to that the fact that we are still in the 1st quarter of the Capricorn Saturn-Pluto cycle that launched in January, 2020, reinforcing the so-called 1%'s throttle-hold on the levers of American government power. This form of power is known as "oligarchy," and we can be sure that the 1% now intends to use it to maximum advantage, with MAGA billionaires Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy about to take a wrecking ball to the Federal government workforce, among other things.
We can all conjure up horror stories about federal bureaucracy, but in fact, our security, well being and livelihoods often depend upon the professionals who operate in various federal departments. The infrastructures that underlie American life can't simply be defunded for the sake of greater tax breaks to the super wealthy. You think the roads and bridges are bad now? And for those who thought "defund the Police" was an extreme, wrong-headed stance, imagine defunding every agency that keeps the lights on in your pocket of America...it would be irresponsible and chaotic, full stop.
Recall that Pluto's recent Capricorn transit culminated with its return to our Sibly Pluto (Pluto is still working its way through a final 5 degree separating orb through late 2025) and that Pluto wasn't the only "heavy hitter" impacting the U.S. chart in dramatic ways. In fact, Neptune is still completing its half-return (opposition) to our Sibly Neptune (Virgo), a transit that coincided largely with the Trump years and--like his Big Lie about election 2020--has gradually eroded public trust in our institutions and in America's founding ideals--dynamics, in other words, that have served the cause of deconstructing the American government as we've known it.
Europe is as threatened with illiberalism (aka fascism) as we are. |
Even his supporters might agree that Donald Trump has been and promises to remain the perfect agent for the kind of transformative destruction Pluto transits often deliver. Stoking hatred and grievances was the driving force of Trump’s first campaign and these tactics are already being reprised in his new administration--look no further than his nomination of extreme loyalist and QAnon-influenced conspiracy theorist Kash Patel to head the embattled FBI.
From the very onset of his 2016 campaign, Trump seemed to sense that the nation was sinking into a foul, defiant mood that he could leverage, and the astrology of the day—especially as reflected in the cyclical index numbers—was, indeed, trending more negative by the day as his administration proceeded. A few examples will illustrate:
· June 16, 2015: Trump took his trip down the golden escalator, announcing his presidential campaign -- the index number was negative (-) 800; shortly thereafter on September 17, 2015, the Jupiter-Neptune cycle achieved 2Q opposition (9/2015), putting that cycle into waning territory, so deepening the negative numbers by over 300 points.
· November 26, 2015: by this time the Saturn-Neptune cycle had reached its 3Q waning square, with the chart for that day clocking in at negative (-) 1205. Only the Jupiter-Uranus, Uranus-Neptune, Uranus-Pluto and Neptune-Pluto cycles offered positive numbers.
· January 12, 2020: a powerful new Saturn-Pluto cycle launched in Capricorn this day, lifting the index numbers by about 360 points, but at a negative (-) 1599, it felt less like a lift and more like a warning shot that the election year looming ahead was bound to be a titanic power struggle. By the end of 2020, the Jupiter-Saturn cycle had launched anew in Capricorn, as well, lifting the index again, but not enough to spare us from what was soon to come.
· January 6, 2021: not a cycles milestone, but a moment
of crisis in American history that was reflected in the negative (-) 1300 index
number. Many people were waving Confederate and Christian Nationalist flags at this attack on the Capitol,
which was baffling then, but more understandable now that Trump has been re-elected on a Christian Nationalist agenda. The U.S. Civil War was at
least fought over deep cultural commitments and what both sides considered noble
causes at the time. That conflict was launched with 8/10 waxing cycles and a positive index
number of 90; January 6th was about supporting one man’s refusal to accept defeat by violently perpetrating his “Big Lie”—as a nation, this was hardly a noble, positive or uplifting cause.
· November 5, 2024: flashing forward to our recent election, the index reveals a considerable shift upward, but it’s still been lingering
in overall negative territory with (-) 12. Two recently renewed cycles contributed
to this upward swing: Jupiter-Neptune (April, 2022) and Jupiter-Uranus (April,
2024). With only two cycles remaining in waning mode until at least 2026, the
positive numbers will be increasing for some time after the election. It's hard to say at this juncture how these lighter numbers will manifest, but I sense from the determined resistance of people on Bluesky that the Trump administration will not find an easy path ahead for its Project 2025 "blueprint."
L-R, Margaret Hoover, Fareed Zakaria. |
In his recent Firing Line conversation with Margaret Hoover, Zakaria characterizes America's situation today as being in the “midst of a full-blown cultural backlash”—“too much change, too fast.” The Obama years did highlight progressive causes like universal health care, gay marriage and transgender rights, but if other gnarly, intertwined issues hadn’t converged in this same packed timeframe—like a global immigration crisis, the growing climate emergency, a global pandemic and the planned obsolescence of human labor that seems to be looming with AI development—would we find ourselves in the deeply divided state we’re in this election year?
In fact, the global disorder that exists today--take your pick of imperiled governments and regions (So. Korea, Syria, Georgia, Germany, Romania, France, Russia, and a large swath of the Middle East) seems to shake out in favor of protecting democracy or at least rejecting thuggish authoritarians. Perhaps the backlash pendulum has swung the other way for now? This is a story that bears watching, but for now I trust that the increasingly positive cyclical index numbers have something to do with this trend.
Meanwhile, technological progress (Jupiter-Uranus) such as the so-called AI Revolution often seems to operate according to its own logic, which in keeping with Uranus, is often disruptive to the larger society in jobs lost, in whole industries made obsolete and in new pressures on individuals and families. On the flip side of that, however, who could have predicted in 1980 that we’d all be carrying powerful, miniaturized computers in our pockets and basically managing our lives “online” by 2024?
With the 2024 Jupiter-Uranus cycle now in its opening phase, we can expect a lot of attention to be paid to this for at least the coming seven years, and we may find that many of the developments feel quite positive, despite the precipitous spike we've been seeing lately in cyber-hacking incidents, cyber-ransom, etc. In fact, I suspect this spike is more about the Jupiter-Neptune cycle's impending first quarter (it flirted with it this past October (just before Jupiter turned RX in communications-related Gemini, widely square Neptune's continuing sojourn in Pisces).
Cyber warfare is elusive and difficult to control, but it achieves its goal: to gradually erode people's confidence in security systems, which leaves openings for greater governmental control. If we're upset at the prospect of Tik-Tok being banned, wait until Trump tries to "protect" us from other media outlets we love because they don't flatter him. I fear some of this may come to pass while the Saturn-Neptune cycle finishes out its current cycle in 2026.
Returning for a moment to Jupiter-Uranus and its drive to develop new technologies, it's worth noting that the gradual process of normalizing new technologies in society always takes time—which is why these disruptive periods are stimulated by Jupiter cycles but are gradually smoothed out and integrated into our daily lives by the dynamics of the Saturn cycles. Over time, we humans can usually be counted on to find ways to adapt to and eventually embrace change. If we have competent leadership and humane governance (Saturn takes the lead here), we can hope to accomplish this without leaving too many behind.
But then there are those who don’t aspire to really lead because leading would require broadly sharing the benefits of progress—their goal is simply Power-writ-large and the lion’s share of the “spoils.” For them, “divide and conquer” tactics and tearing down our trust in social institutions work best, and what divides us better than deeply-rooted cultural issues marinated in sensationalism and propaganda? Issues like race, gender, religion, perceived status and conflicting perspectives about the most fundamental ideas (like what constitutes “freedom”) are all great fodder for the dividers. These divisions don’t just arise naturally; they are cultivated and goal-driven.
In fact, dividing the public has been approached like a blood sport in recent years: the COVID pandemic could have united us in the fight against a common “enemy,” but no, that would have been too easy…. twisting it into a chaotic, self-destructive political football laced with conspiracy theories is probably still paying nice dividends to key players, especially fringe extremists like anti-vaxxer Robert Kennedy Jr., nominated by Trump to head our Department of Health and Human Services.
As NPR put it, Kennedy was being charged by Trump with "remaking American healthcare." Remaking it to do what? Losing children and seniors to preventable disease? IMHO, Kennedy endangering the American public with his unscientific crusade against vaccines is far from "fixing" health care.
Last time Trump was in office he tried to "fix" healthcare by taking it away from millions of Americans...what makes anyone think he cares about our healthcare this time around? He cares about cutting back on federal outlays and coverage and on basically destroying the ACA, Medicare and Medicaid from within (mostly by promising more benefits if people opt for privatized plans) instead of leaving it to Congress. Bottom line, the blessings we have enjoyed with our federal public health experts and the systems we rely on for our care (as imperfect as they are) could be on life support in a matter of weeks and I find it very difficult to believe that this seriously backward move is really what Trump supporters wanted.
Final thoughts
So historically, it’s difficult to dispute Zakaria’s
conclusions about the social and political dynamics that have brought us to our present moment. Maybe this should be no surprise: we seem to be good at
taking a few key steps forward, only to then hit a wall and end up
taking multiple
steps back, especially during times of economic stress. Trouble is, systems are in place these days to make sure that economic stress will be a reliable constant for millions, and if nothing changes that, we can probably count on generations of "divide and conquer" tactics pulling our strings like we're all part of some cosmic puppet show. And the more we are kept busy fighting each other, the more impossible it will be to strengthen our democracy against those who find it inconvenient or not "corporate" enough.
So, yes, we’ve been through a lot since the “hyperglobalized 1990s” that Fareed Zakaria writes about in his Age of Revolutions, connecting that period to the 2008 financial crisis and to our present situation. Astrologically, the 1990s functioned like a pressure cooker that would finally explode in our faces with the contested 2000 election and the tragic events of September 11, 2001. It’s difficult to disagree with Zakaria’s analysis—especially once the outer planets have their say!
Even so, as Winston
Churchill has been credited saying, “Americans can always be
trusted to do the right thing, once all other possibilities have been
exhausted." The "right thing" isn't always easy to discern, of course--it's a matter of which worldview prevails.
Democracy or autocracy? A government of the People or of the
billionaires who are busy eroding and buying our national institutions
out from under us? (can't get stuck paying taxes!). This goes beyond one
election and one pair of candidates, but I don't believe it's too late
to say enough is enough and to seek out better possibilities.
For much more on the transformative times we have been living through, or to perhaps explore the basics of cycles-related astrology, please see my latest publication, A Guide to the Astrology of Outer-Planetary Cycles, Volume 1: the Jupiter Cycles. Both the Kindle e-book and paperback versions are now available at this link!
Thank you so much for your kind attention over the life of this blog—any and all questions or feedback are welcome and much-appreciated!
Keep it light, my friends!
Raye Robertson is a practicing astrologer, writer and retired educator. A graduate of the Faculty of Astrological Studies (U.K.), Raye focuses on mundane, collective-oriented astrology, with a particular interest in current affairs, U.S. history, culture and media, the astrology of generations, and public concerns such as education and health. Her articles on these topics have appeared in several key astrology journals over the years, and she has authored three books on mundane astrology topics that are currently available on Amazon Kindle. For information about individual chart readings, contact: robertsonraye@gmail.com.
© Raye Robertson 2024. All rights reserved.