Jupiter in Aquarius

Q&A and discussion on major planet sign transits and their impact on mass behavior.
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Jim Eshelman
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Jupiter in Aquarius

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Jupiter enters in Aquarius in a few days. Here are periods Jupiter has been in Aquarius during U.S. history. - My first observation is that the last time Jupiter was in Aquarius was the 2009-10 period when the new Obama administration and congress were doing most of the work on the Affordable Care Act, including its passage on 3/23/2010.

The new passage will be Apr 10 through Sep 6, then November through next April.

Mar 4 1784 - Mar 14 1785
Feb 17 1796 - Feb 27 1797
Feb 3 1808 - Feb 12 1809
Jan 18 1820 - Jun 17 1820
Aug 7 1820 - Jan 24 1821
Dec 31 1831 - May 13 1832
Sep 25 1832 - Dec 31 1832
Apr 19 1843 - Aug 15 1843
Dec 9 1843 - Apr 22 1844
Mar 28 1855 - Apr 5 1856
Mar 11 1867 - Mar 20 1868
Feb 23 1879 - Mar 4 1880
Feb 7 1891 - Feb 17 1892
Jan 23 1903 - Jan 31 1904
Jan 6 1915 - May 22 1915
Sep 16 1915 - Jan 9 1916
Apr 29 1926 - Aug 4 1926
Dec 18 1926 - Apr 30 1927
Nov 11 1927 - Nov 27 1927
Apr 4 1938 - Sep 18 1938
Nov 18 1938 - Apr 12 1939
Mar 16 1950 - Mar 26 1951
Feb 28 1962 - Mar 10 1963
Feb 12 1974 - Feb 23 1975
Jan 28 1986 - Feb 6 1987
Jan 12 1998 - Jun 1 1998
Sep 3 1998 - Jan 17 1999
May 8 2009 - Jul 22 2009
Dec 24 2009 - May 6 2010
Oct 20 2010 - Dec 17 2010
Apr 10 2021 - Sep 6 2021
Nov 28 2021 - Apr 17 2022
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Re: Jupiter in Aquarius

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I'm not going to do my usual exhaustive look through each period for this, but I'm going to spot-check some of these periods for things that jump out at me. We don't have a lot of earlier findings on outer planets passing through Aquarius for comparison, primarily just the current passage of Neptune through Aquarius, which is summarized in the corresponding thread.

RECURRING THEMES:
  • Significant scientific breakthroughs or pushing pragmatic boundaries of our reality (especially including significant space exploration thresholds and aviation advances). Nuclear power in the news (as breakthroughs and technical development or as crisis).
  • Computer or cybernetic technology thresholds.
  • Support of more inclusive or universal political philosophy or alliances.
  • Progressive political innovation (especially greater inclusion and collectivity).
  • Scandals/crises of those in power with the potential to dethrone.
  • Numerous coups, large scale protests against leadership, or similar overthrows. Civil wars (and their conclusions).
  • Innovative financial institutions introduced.
5/8-7/22/2009. 12/24/09-5/6/10. 10/20-12/17/10. Sri Lankan and Chadian civil wars ended. Swine Flu outbreak deemed a global pandemic. Iran mass protests over disputed presidential election. Coup in Niger. Michael Jackson died. 7.0 magnitude Haiti earthquake. Cyber breaches become more common, including massive leaks by the relatively new Wikileaks. Deepwater Horizon explosion polluted the Gulf of Mexico. First capturing of antimatter by scientists. Much space exploration news including the International Space Station setting new records for longest continuous human occupation of space. Affordable Care Act passed by Congress and signed into law.

1/12-6/1/1998. 9/3/98-1/17/99. News of the Clinton-Lewinski affair broke almost immediately. Anti-vax movement began with a fraudulent study published in Lancet linking vaccines and autism. Suharto resigns after 32 years as Indonesian president. Pakistan successfully tests nuclear weapons. Google is founded. Significant space news including John Glenn's return to space as a payload specialist and the transport of the first parts for the International Space Station into orbit. The Euro currency is established and the European Central Bank assumes its full powers.

1/28/1986-2/6/87. Mikhail Gorbachev announces his new policies of Glasnost (openness, transparency) and Perestroika (reconstruction). Philippine protests drive Fernando Marcos from office and eventuate in a new constitution. Microsoft's IPO. First childbirth from an unrelated surrogate mother. Chernobyl disaster. Over 5 million people form a human chain from NY to Long Beach (Hands Across America) to fight hunger and homelessness. Goldwater-Nichols Act is the largest reorganization of the U.S. Department of Defense since 1947. Iran-Contra Affair begins with leaked news of U.S. secretly selling weapons to Iran.

2/12/1974-2/23/75. OPEC oil embargo against the U.S. ends (closing the 1973 oil crisis). India detonates its first nuclear weapon. Coup in Cyprus. Watergate scandal climaxes with Nixon's resignation. Hailie Selassie deposed in a military junta that starts the Ethiopian Civil War. Democrats make big gains in the '74 mid-terms. Microcomputer revolution boosted significantly by release of Altair 8800.

2/28/1962-3/10/63. Burma coup. Togo coup. Bob Dylan's debut album. Helsinki Convention creates cooperative accords between Scandinavian nations. Seattle World's Fair. Project Mercury continues [John Glenn's flight was a week before this period began: public interest was high]. Telstar is launched (world's first commercial communications satellite). Marilyn Monroe dies. Numerous small countries gain post-colonial independence. The Jetsons premiers. The Cuban Missile Crisis. A South Carolina Black college admission ends the last state's holdout against de-segregation. Travel etc. to Cuba outlawed in U.S. Betty Friedan's The Feminist Mystique published.

3/16/1950-3/26/51. The Schuman Declaration proposing a pan-European organization pave the way for the later EU. L. Ron Hubbard's Dianetics published. Korean War begins and unfolds; the United Nation responds collectively. Pope Pius XII declares evolution to be a serious hypothesis that does not contradict essential Catholic teaching. France introduces a government-guaranteed minimum wage. Pres. Truman approves NSC 68, defining U.S. military and foreign policy for the rest of the Cold War. U.S. nuclear testing in Nevada begins. 22nd Amendment ratified (term-limit on U.S. president). Rosenberg trial begins.

4/4-9/18/1938. 11/18/38-4/12/39. Superman debuts in Action Comics #1. Spanish Civil War continues; Franco eventually assumes full power. Hitler and Mussolini power and threat gradually grows. U.S. Civil Aeronautics Authority created. Howard Hughes completes a record-breaking 91-hour airplane flight around the world. Czechoslovakia fragmented then ceases to exist.

4/29-8/4/1926. 12/18/26-4/30/27. 11/11-11/27/1927. U.K. general strike (in support of coal strikers); consequent declaration of martial law. Byrd (perhaps) then Ahmundsen (for sure) fly over North Pole. Air Commerce Act licenses U.S. pilots and planes. Portugal coup (2x; a third is blocked). First trans-Atlantic telephone call. First long-distance demonstration of TV. Nicaraguan Civil War with U.S. intervention. Heisenberg formulates his uncertainty principle. British influenza epidemic kills 1K people/week.

1/6-5/22/1915. 9/16/15-1/9/16. (World War I and Armenian Genocide are ongoing.) First U.S. coast-to-coast phone call. The (brief) "Typhoid Mary" typhoid spread in NYC. Poison gas is introduced and used more widely in war. KKK revived (first time since Civil War era).

1/23/1903-1/31/1904. First formation of a labor union with members of different races (Oxnard strike). Treaty granting U.S. the right to build the Panama Canal ratified (later rejected, then Panama separates from Colombia with U.S. encouragement and a new treaty is signed). Henry Ford founded Ford Motor Co., rolls out the Model A. Wright brothers fly for the first time.

2/7/1891-2/17/1892. The London-Paris telephone system opened. French workers march on May Day supporting an 8-hour work day; troops fire on them, killing some and wounding many. Edison's prototype kinetoscope (a motion picture device) is first demonstrated. Trans-Siberian Railway construction begins. First long-distance transmission of AC electricity. Chilean Civil War ends. Ellis Island opens to receive immigrants to the U.S. Rudolph Diesel patented the Diesel engine.

2/23/1879-3/4/1880. Mary Baker Eddy founded her Christian Science church. Henry George's Progress & Poverty addresses causes of poverty in an expanding economy. First female students admitted to the University of Oxford. Edison successfully tested and then patents his first practical incandescent light bulb. Science is first published in the U.S. (financed by Edison). The first electric streetlight is installed (in Wabash, IN, which soon becomes the first electrically lit city in the world).

3/11/1867-3/20/1868. Joseph Lister first describes the discovery of antiseptic surgery in The Lancet. Canada is formed. U.S. purchases Alaska from Russia (called "Seward's Folly" at the time). Alfred Nobel patented dynamite. Austro-Hungarian Empire created and King Francis Joseph of Austria was crowned King of Hungary. North German Confederation formed confederating several states under leadership of Otto von Bismarck and Prussia. Emperor Maximilian of Mexico executed by firing squad. Karl Marx' Das Kapital is published. The Medicine Lodge Treaty signed in Kansas requiring North American Plains tribes to relocate to a reservation in Oklahoma. Garibaldi's troops marched into Rome, consolidating Italy's unification. Impeachment of Pres. Andrew Johnson.

3/28/1855-4/5/1856. Nepal invades Tibet (Nepalese Tibetan War). First official Bordeaux wine classification and ranking is published. Australian colonies are granted self-governance by the UK. "Bleeding Kansas" violence broke out between proslavery and antislavery factions.

4/19-8/15/1843. 12/9/1843-4/22/1844. First major wagon train set out, going from Missouri to the Oregon Trail with 1,000 pioneers. Joseph Smith received his new revelation recommending polygamy. Dicken's A Christmas Carol is first published (and sells out in five days). London's Fleet debtors prison was closed, considered a human rights landmark.

12/31/1831-5/13/1832. 9/25-12/31/32. New-England Anti-Slavery Society founded. Slave revolt in Jamaica is put down by white planters' militias and British troops. Cholera epidemic in London kills at least 3,000, then spreads to France and North America. The Black Hawk War begins. Kingdom of Greece is created as an independent modern country, ending the Greek War of Independence.

1/18-6/17/1820. 8/7/20-1/24/21. Missouri Compromise becomes law, admitting Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state. Royal Astronomical Society founded in London. Joseph Smith received his First Vision. Failed Paraguay coup. Revolution erupts in Portugal.

2/3/1808-2/12/1809. First burning of anthracite coal for residential heating. Russia invades Finland (Finnish War) and eventually claims it. Slave Trade Act of 1807 abolished slave trade in the UK and all of its colonies. Portugal moves its royal court to Rio de Janeiro, the new center of the Portuguese Empire. Humphrey Davy first reports his successes in separated elements by electrolysis and numerous discoveries. Napoleon's campaigns dominate much of what is happening in Europe. Robert Fulton patented the steamboat.

2/17/1796-2/27/1797. Jay Treaty ratified, resolving many potential problems between the U.S. and Great Britain. Napoleon begins his campaigns as an army commander (the War of the First Coalition and French Revolutionary Wars are waged). First smallpox vaccination administered. Pres. George Washington winds down his presidency and issues his Farewell Address. Catherine the Great died.
Jim Eshelman
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Re: Jupiter in Aquarius

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Today, Jupiter reentered Aquarius, where it will remain until April 17, 2022
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Re: Jupiter in Aquarius

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This morning, Jupiter left Aquarius for the next 11 years and entered Pisces.
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