German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Germany's Parliament, the  Bundestag, that    the "future of Germany in Europe is at stake," as she tried convince German lawmakers to approve a bail-out that will see Germany hand over billions to its weakest EU member country - Greece.
Axel Weber, the powerful German central banker said, "there is a grave threat of contagion effects for other member states  in the    monetary union and increasing negative feedback loop effects."
Talking about contagion: Spain is next.
It's bailout may cost as much as $600  billion, according to U.S. Representative Mark Steven Kirk,  a republican from Illinois, who serves on the committee overseeing  American financing to the IMF. "That is far more than the  monetary fund has available to lend," he  said.
According to sources, the monetary fund only has $268 billion on hand ~ a shortfall of $332 billion. Quite a number indeed.
Still, some economists are calling for a kind of American-type bailout that took place in October 2008 in suggesting that the European Central Bank (ECB) buy billions of Euros of the Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt investors have shunned with the IMF potentially offering to bailout Spain next.
This would be well over the $700 billion the U.S. Congress approved in their TARP bailout of the big banks in 2008, that saved the American economy from collapse.
The problem is that for the most part, the pairing of the ECB and the IMF is a strange partnership to witness for many economists, who say they do not expect the Europeans to show the courage and flexibility needed for such large bailouts of entire nations in the euro zone.
Mercury Retrograde & The Greek Bailout Agreement 
 My Astrological Advice: Review, Revise & Redo
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou
The Greek bailout agreement of May 1, 2010 took place under a Mercury retrograde in Taurus. A bad time to formulate such heady agreements like huge financial bailouts of whole countries.
The expected passage of the bailout by EU member nations is by Friday, May 7th. The Greek Parliament has already passed the measure May 6th.
All this, with Mercury retrograde. It's amazing. It really is just, well, amazing...
Now, European officials continue to make serious errors saying the bailout plan for Greece is  sufficient and there that is simply no need for a broader aid proposal , or, for a formal  debt restructuring in any of the other afflicted countries.
I say they are wrong. Very wrong.
For one, it is obvious that investors continue to push down the Euro, which fell to $1.28 on May 5. Then, today, on May 6th, a global decline in stock values. These are sure signs investor confidence is eroding ~ especially in Europe.
Second, and most important ~ the world transits on this situation are clear, and so is my advice on this matter:
It is time to review, revise, and redo.
It is my forecast that the Greek EU-IMF bailout agreement will have to  be revised, with major alterations, and changed after Mercury stations direct at 2-Taurus on May 11th.
Do not the ECB, IMF and Greek government know that signing such important fiscal agreements ~ and then voting to pass the austerity measures ~ during a Mercury Retrograde, particularly in a money sign like Taurus ~ is a BIG NO NO?
My astrological advice would be to immediately slow down, stop, and then review, revise, and redo the bailout agreement with a focus to cut back the  severe austerity measures on the Greek people, and then ~ come up with a  better plan to relieve the Greek economy before all hell breaks loose.
And believe, me, it is closer than you may think.
There still is time to bring some calmer heads to this situation should the players and their staffs pull back and look seriously at revising the conditions being forced on Greece. 
Slow down. Do not rush under these cardinal inclinations or you all will make things worse.
The Germans would be an immense help here, and would improve their status by stepping in to give Greece help without pulling itself into the fray politically.
Germany is only protecting itself, and rightly so.
Caution is well advised here, and the Germans have been practicing it despite pressures from the EU, and others, those who continue to make serious errors by rushing things through haste, and impulse.
Another Big no no under the cardinal inclinations.
Those Germans reading this already know what I know about the coming new Deutsche Mark. If this decision has already been made, then there is simply no reason to pretend as if it is not going to happen, yes?
There is no need to pretend that Germany is not the sovereign nation that it truly is anyhow. Moreover, it is well-known that Germany was forced into accepting EU conditions despite its own concerns about the Euro, and integration of weaker European nations into the monetary union.
So, why pretend when much is at stake at this point? The Germans cannot be faulted for being very skeptical of the bailout plans given the history of Germany's concern about the monetary union over several decades.
Germany is being asked, again, to do something it does not want to do, and for very good reasons. What is happening is Germany is going to go its own way - fiscally, and through its own currency - since Brussels cannot seem to balance its own checkbooks.
A positive move for Greece would be to extend the provisions beyond three years, which is very shortsighted and over-optimistic in my view; considering the extent to which the world economy will need to recover for Europe to absorb the cutbacks in spending that is surely coming.
All this will do is to spread violent social rebellions in the years to come with possible overthrows of several governments in the process. This is very expensive as it is, and surely there are better and positive ways to handle this situation, yes?
I say there is.
In the short-term again: Review, Revise & Redo.
A proper time to review the changes to the Greek bailout agreement would be after the May 14 New Moon in Taurus, then, to enact the revised changes between May 28 through June 12th.
This would ease pressure on the Euro, and give investors more time to build up some market confidence. It would also give the Germans more time to think, and allow things to calm down on the streets of Athens with people knowing that the severe cutbacks are being re-thought.
It also allows the Greek government more time to ease into the conditions beyond the ridiculously short three months given to Prime Minister George Papandreou to begin the terms of the austerity package.
This will not only calm things down in Europe, but will save many lives in the process. This is most important.
I would give Greece the rest of 2010 to make adjustments in these draconian austerity measures, and allow the changes to take place gradually, not beginning until late August 2011. This will calm things down substantially.
World transits clearly show that forcing all this to take place, under these powerful cardinal transits, at this time, and through the summer and autumn months simply adds up to economic suicide ~ on a European-wide scale.
It does not allow for more favorable transits to arrive in time before such severe measures are forced on a country, with impacts outside of Greece, and affecting the entire global economy ~ especially in Europe.
But, then again, that's just me. I'm only a mundane astrolog, yes? So what do I know?
Meanwhile, Europe is holding its collective breath.
“It is not really about money,” says Timothy Congdon, an economist and Euro skeptic who said he foresees a wide exodus of savings in banks sitting on  Europe’s periphery to flow into Germany because of serious doubts about some of the nations in the monetary union.
This is another matter that is very serious.
People tend to forget what the "weather" was like back in June 1997, when the move towards 
the Euro was cemented at the European Council Meeting in Amsterdam. More on that below.
German public opinion was always  wary of giving up their beloved Deutsche mark, so the German government insisted  on tough conditions for countries like Greece that wanted to join the monetary union back in 1981, when it entered the then-European Community.
Even as late as the June 1997 European Council Meeting in Amsterdam; Germans were still wary of what was happening ~
"At Amsterdam, sensitivities about sovereignty regarding EMU within  Kohl's coalition and the impact of Article 23 in the German Basic Law,  meant that the Chancellor could not override domestic opposition in the  name of European federalist ideology.
The German interest is  grounded in the legal and political realities determined by shared power  in a federal system of government."  
"Not a year goes by without some fresh blueprint being drawn up and  fed into the continuing debate. Each succeeding blueprint can be likened  to the way in which some artists go over their work again and again,  gradually building up a deep richness to the emerging picture.
"Old paint on canvas, as it ages, sometimes becomes transparent. When  that happens it is possible, in some pictures, to see the original  lines: a tree will show through a woman's dress, a child makes way for a  dog, a large boat is no longer on an open sea. 
That is called  'pentimento' because the painter 'repented,' changed his mind. Perhaps it  would be as well to say that the old conception, replaced by a later  choice, is a way of seeing and then seeing again." 
The European monetary union rule was that the budget  deficits of all member nations were supposed to be below three-percent  of gross domestic product and that debt was not to exceed 60 percent of  G.D.P. while inflation could not top three-percent.
Greece is not alone, and is not the only Eurozone nation under stress that has to withstand severe spending cuts while at the same time holding to the monetary unions' fixed regimen.
Central European countries like Latvia, which is now taking part in an IMF bailout program; and Lithuania, surviving on its own ~ have shrunk by  more than 10 percent as a result of deep cutbacks in government  spending.
No one expected the economic crisis of 2007-08, and now, ten years into the birth of the Euro, we find just that.  
I clearly remember the scene in Amsterdam when in June 1997 when the designs for the Euro were agreed upon. What I saw from the skies was a series of swirling dark clouds that descended over the very building leaders gathered to meet. It was an strange sight for sure, and - an ominous warning about the Euro.
It was the first time that newly-elected British Prime Minister Tony Blair was introduced to the other European leaders. Heady days. 
Everyone was all smiles, but the day began with those swirling dark clouds, as if sent by God Himself to make a point about the future of the European Union, and the Euro.
Those dark clouds, I knew, were a 
warning. What also 
took place in Amsterdam on June 16-18, 1997 was a resolution on something called ERM2 ~ an an exchange rate mechanism between the Euro and the currencies of the other EU countries was been designed.
On the basis of this document, the European Council adopted a Resolution on the ERM2 at its meeting in Amsterdam in June 1997.
Let's take a closer look at this -
A speech given by Wim Duisenberg, President of the European Monetary  Institute, at the conference - "The Euro & the European Innovative Industry" in Toulouse, France, on October 17, 1997 ~ titled "1999 - A New European Monetary System."
"The main operational features of ERM 2 may be summarised under four (4) points: 
First, for each participating non-euro  area currency, a central rate vis-à-vis the euro will be defined. Unlike the present ERM, there will no longer be a "parity grid."
The new so-called  "hub-and-spokes" approach puts the euro at the centre of the system. Around the euro  central rates, a standard fluctuation band of +/- 15% will be established.
This rather wide band reflects the good experience with the operation of the current ERM. It avoids offering "one-way bets" in periods of speculative pressure.
It also allows temporary deviations from the  central rates to accommodate minor asymmetric economic disturbances.
The recent experience in the ERM has shown that central rates exert a strong  magnetic force for exchange rates, thus contributing to avoiding misalignments.
In practice, exchange rate fluctuations have, for most currencies,  proved to be even more limited than in the former 2.25% narrow band of the ERM.
This effect has been reinforced after the decision taken at the Mondorf Informal ECOFIN in mid-September to announce bilateral conversion rates in May 1998.
In summary, ERM2 is an asymmetric system, centered around the Euro.
There have been in the past many discussions concerning the asymmetric nature of the current exchange rate mechanism, and the desirability of this  asymmetry.
I think that there can be no doubt that ERM2 will have to be asymmetric, given the Euro area's size and the stability-oriented policies that will be pursued in the euro area, in particular by the European System of  Central Banks.
A second feature is that central rates  and the standard wide band will be set by mutual agreement between all parties.
These parties are the Euro-area Finance Ministers, the ECB, and the Finance Ministers and central bank Governors of the non-euro area Member States  participating in ERM2.
The European Commission will, as today, be involved in the  procedure. All parties to the agreement, including the ECB, will have the right to initiate a procedure for reconsidering central rates.
This will ensure that any adjustment of central rates will be conducted in a timely  fashion.
A third feature is that, as today, there  will be automatic and unlimited foreign exchange intervention and financing when exchange  rates reach the fluctuation margins.
As a general principle, it is understood that intervention will have to be used to support - not replace - other policy measures, including appropriate fiscal and monetary policies.
Furthermore, an explicit safeguard clause has been introduced, and this is new, by  which both the ECB and the participating non-euro area NCBs are allowed to  suspend intervention and financing if these were to impinge on their price  stability objective.
The central banks participating in the agreement will retain the possibility of coordinated intra-marginal intervention, to be  decided by mutual agreement in parallel with other appropriate policy responses. 
Finally, there is the possibility to have  closer links between non-Euro area NCBs and the ECB.
A non-Euro area Member State that has  reached an advanced degree of convergence with the Euro area may request closer exchange rate co-operation. This may take various forms.
It can entail participation in formal narrower bands, to be agreed upon in a procedure analogous to that for central rate decisions. Alternatively, informal  arrangements can be made, for instance target ranges, which might not be made public."
"Overall, ERM2 is equipped with the necessary instruments to ensure  exchange rate stability and to avoid that the move to the Euro creates tensions and segregation in the European Union."
[Here is where Duisenberg's "academic" speech is more or less prophetic ~ considering what is now happening in Greece & Europe in 2010.]
 "I am fully aware that what I have been talking about until now may  sound a bit theoretical. I do not want to shy away from the real question that you want to be tackled, which I believe is:
How can it be avoided that a country not entering the euro area from the start is "left out in the cold", to use the expression of an academic, with the consequence of severe exchange rate tensions,  depreciation, competitive distortions that are a detriment not only to the country  itself but also to the economies of the Euro area?
I am fully aware that ERM2 provides only part of the answer. It  represents a framework for monetary and foreign exchange policy co-operation; it  does not ensure by itself that the right policies are in the end implemented, in particular in the countries outside the euro area.
ERM2 is a  necessary condition, it is not sufficient. But I believe that the creation of the Euro will represent an additional impulse for further economic  integration in Europe.
In other words, I believe that the Euro need not be a factor of  division of Europe but rather will have the potential of becoming an instrument  for accelerating its integration." 
Okay, now we are getting somewhere.
It appears that my suspicions, by reviewing the world transits of the late 1990s, were correct. I remember that morning of June 16, with the Moon in Libra square to Neptune at 29-Capricorn, watching those dark clouds gathering ~ literally ~ over the very spot where the European Council was meeting.
At the time, the transiting Lunar Nodes were on the Pisces/Virgo axis, with the South Lunar Node at 23-Pisces in June 1997. This is exactly where transiting Jupiter is at now, with Uranus within orb, and at this time we see the Euro under stress.
In addition, looking at the June 16, 1997 transits for Amsterdam, we can see that Mars in Virgo then, is now being conjoined by transiting Saturn in Virgo, and, in opposition to transiting Jupiter in Pisces.
The progressed transits for this time to May show a Progressed Moon in Aries opposed to Chiron in Libra ~ this feature monetary stress, which is what the Euro zone is now encountering. By January 2013, the Progressed Moon of this time opposes Pluto, with more stresses on the Euro.
By April of 2014, during the month of the worldwide Cardinal Grand Cross, the Progressed Mercury of the June 1997 European Council Chart is square to its Progressed Saturn in Aries. At this time in 2014, the Euro will be 15-years old.
Should the sovereign debt crisis continue to get out of hand, it is my forecast that the Euro will be greatly weakened, thus increasing chances Germany may indeed return to their own currency, and issue a new Deutsche Mark ~ staying within the European Union, but effectively leaving the monetary union.
The Greek crisis has sparked an age-old clash between the EU's two biggest nations: France, and Germany. 
France, a republican country that has a tradition of interventions, and a casual attitude towards public debt contrasts that of Germany, with it strict attachment to rules and frugality that comes from its own currency traumas.
This is understandable, since Germany, a nation that lost their savings twice in the 20th century ~ once to hyperinflation in 1923 with Uranus in Pisces, and again, to currency reform after the Second World War ~ holds tight to its principles of central bank independence and budgetary discipline. The very core of the German financial psyche.
“Germans fear going bankrupt themselves,” said John C. Kornblum, a former United States ambassador to Germany. "Paris and Berlin have had many disagreements in the postwar world, but  few are as deep-rooted as those on economic governance."
In fact, my mundane view show that quiet talks have been already underway in Germany to do just that - return to the Deutsche Mark. If this occurs, then the Euro, as we know it today, is doomed.
Meanwhile, Congdon said economic figures prove even after deflationary stresses on Spain and Ireland, for instance, and the much wider effect of the Greek  crisis on credit-starved banks in Europe, that there actually has been no growth in  the European Central Bank’s money supply.  
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus & Pluto 
Preview of The Cardinal Crisis
On May 23, Jupiter will oppose Saturn for the first time in 20 years on the Pisces/Virgo axis. This comes less than a month since the fourth Saturn/Uranus opposition of April 26th.
Then, by June 8, 2010, transiting Jupiter & Uranus will meet in conjunction at tropical 00-Aries ~ the seasonal point which is very sensitive to transits of the outer planets. Saturn is forming an opposition to both planets and Pluto in tropical Capricorn squares them all.
This is a "preview" conjunction which forms over the months of June, July, and August 2010, before both Jupiter and Uranus return back into the late degrees of tropical Pisces for their conjunction over the fall months, and into winter 2011.
In my 
February 2010 and subsequent forecasts, I warned about the inclinations and influences of the Cardinal Crisis transits.
These planetary configurations began to build right after the arrival  of the new astrological year that occurred March 20, 2010, when the Sun  entered Aries, and the Earth reached the vernal equinox.
What  will be most notable about the build-up towards the Cardinal  inclinations in 2010 are the frustrations, temper tantrums, hotheads,  and impulsive behaviors amongst supposed adults that stem from within  those who are immature to their very core.
The Cardinal  Crisis transits feature energies that will incline people to  react powerfully.
One  will observe that pettiness, impulsive acts and ignorance flowing from  people who have what I call toxic  personalities. Avoid them like the plague if you want to be  happy, wealthy and wise.
What follows are the  significant planetary aspects from April to October 2010 -
- April 6-7 - Pluto stations retrograde at  5-Capricorn
 
-  April 7, 2010 - Saturn re-enters tropical Virgo
 
-  April 26, 2010 - Saturn opposes Uranus (4th opposition)
 
-  May 23, 2010 - Jupiter opposes  Saturn (first time since 1990-91)
 
-  May 27-28, 2010 - Uranus enters tropical Aries
 
-  May 30th, 2010 - Saturn stations direct motion
 
-  June 5-6, 2010 - Jupiter enters  tropical Aries
 
-  June 6-7, 2010 - Mars enters tropical Virgo
 
-  June 8, 2010 - Jupiter conjoins Uranus
 
- July 5, 2010 - Uranus stations  retrograde at 0-Aries
 
-  July 8, 2010 - Jupiter turns North in declination
 
-  July 11, 2010 - New Moon total eclipse at 19-Cancer (not seen in N.  America)
 
-  July 21, 2010 - Saturn re-enters tropical Libra for good
 
-  July 23, 2010 - Jupiter stations retrograde
 
-  July 25, 2010 - Jupiter Squares Pluto
 
-  July 26, 2010 - Fifth Saturn/Uranus opposition
 
-  July 31, 2010 - Mars & Jupiter turn S in Declination
 
- August 3, 2010 - Jupiter,  retrograde, Squares Pluto again
 
-  August 6, 2010 - Venus turns South in Declination
 
-  August 13-14, 2010 - Uranus re-enters tropical Pisces
 
-  August 16, 2010 - Jupiter Opposes Saturn
 
-  August 20, 2010 - Mercury retrogrades in Virgo
 
-  August 21, 2010 - Saturn Squares Pluto
 
- September 8, 2010 - Saturn turns  South in declination
 
-  September 8, 2010 - New Moon at 15-Virgo
 
-  September 8, 2010 - Venus enters Scorpio
 
-  September 8-9, 2010 - Jupiter re-enters tropical Pisces
 
-  September 12, 2010 - Mercury stations direct
 
-  September 14, 2010 - Pluto stations direct
 
-  September 14, 2010 - Mars enters Scorpio
 
-  September 19, 2010 - Jupiter conjoins Uranus in Pisces
 
-  October 8, 2010 - Venus  stations retrograde in Scorpio
 
- October 18, 2010 - Jupiter conjoins Uranus in Pisces
 
 These transits are those of the first series of the Cardinal Crisis that will surely impact the world - mainly through the financial systems of nations, which we are now witnessing in the Sovereign Debt Emergency of 2010-2014.
I continue to state, as I have for years, that the decade of the  2010s will be akin to the Great Depression years of the 1930s, and  will, in the long-run, lead to geopolitical tensions that will change  the tone and character of the early 21st century.
Most  of this will come about because people were not prepared, and did not make adjustments to meet the  coming inclinations.
It also has occurred because  policymakers, international bankers, speculators and those in industries  like residential and commercial real estate allowed themselves to  believe their own fantasies - with devastating consequences for tens of  millions of people worldwide.
As I've written before,  the strongest months of those of July, August, and September 2010 with August being the most powerful month  under these powerful cardinal inclinations.
Travel is unfavorable. There are dangerous  transits during the summer vacation season in the northern hemisphere.  Accidents in and around bodies of water are highlighted, from the air,  and on the high seas ~ perilous conditions exist that will lead to violent  interactions, and in some cases, deaths involving large groups of  people.
I continue to advise against taking chances  during the months from July through September 2010 - especially in the  northern hemispheric summer season.
Stay close to home, and use the rest of 2010 to relax, and observe the cardinal transits in action  through the world news.
Meanwhile, I would ask that everyone pray for the countries of the world now suffering under the crushing weight of the economic crisis, and that those responsible be brought to justice for causing what will amount to the Second Great Depression ~ the first one of the 21st century.
Some people may think that all of this is, rather, well, "melodramatic;" however, I continue to remind people that my outlook is that of a mundane astrologer, and that I maintain that these times, when looked back on years from now ~ will be seen as nothing less than historic.
So, I warn those taking events of the present times a bit too lightly that they are making a serious mistake in doing so. Again, foretold is forewarned.
It is not wise to shut one's eyes to what is taking place in the hope that it will go away. It will not go away. In fact, things are going to change evermore so in the weeks, months, and years ahead.
Challenging and changing times require bold leaders who are skilled tacticians and visionaries. Those who failed to foresee and prepare for what is now taking place must be relieved of their positions and let go, or they will simply make things worse than they are now by their very presence.
We are all living and experiencing the start of an historic age.
Stay safe out there ~ and never give up. America and the world is worth fighting for and it ain't for sale either. Remember that.
1 comment:
Excellent post. Your blog is outstanding.
Best Regards, a reader
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