by Robert Gover
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As Bernanke assumes the reins of the Fed, Saturn in Leo will be tightening an opposition to Neptune in Aquarius. Peak danger periods for inflationary spikes will climax when this opposition makes exact hits: August 31, 2006, February 26, 2007 and June 25, 2007. However, inflation is likely to become an issue when Saturn, now moving retrograde, turns direct April 6 this year, and then as its opposition to Neptune rises like an ocean wave to crest in August.
Lost in Neptunian uncertainty right now is a new currency exchange due to open March 20 in Tehran, Iran to facilitate trading oil for euros instead of dollars. We can only speculate as to why this information has been withheld from the American public. How will Bernanke handle it?
In the second biwheel combining the date of this new Iranian Bourse opening and the USA's chart, notice that the Bourse date's Saturn (frustrations, restrictions) as it applies to an opposition to Neptune, is also opposite the US Pluto (birth, death, transformation). And Neptune (uncertainty, deception) is within a degree of an exact conjunction with the US Moon (American pubic). Jupiter's square to Neptune continues, expanding Neptune's uncertainty. This very accurately describes what global financial insiders expect will happen: the American public, as indicated by the Moon, will be suspended in Neptunian uncertainty.
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“(The USA ) is not the same nation...,” proclaims Bill Bonner (1) “or the same empire...we used to know. It owes more money to more people and is less able to pay...Neither Democrats nor Republicans, neither liberals nor conservatives will admit it. They've all been in on the swindle. Fed budgets and budget deficits are a bi-partisan flim-flam. Together, the two parties have connived to add more to...public debt in the two Bush administrations than in all the administrations and all the Congresses that came before them put together...Much of this debt can be traced to the never-ending war in Iraq. It has already gone on longer than America's participation in World War I. And now two professors, one from Harvard and the other from MIT, put the cost at...as much as $2 trillion, or about $20,000 per homeland family.” (Other calculations put the cost at $27,000 per family and rising rapidly.)
http://www.stariq.com/Main/Articles/P0006936.HTM