Browsing the archives for the political category

AVATAR in 3D – Nature vs. Guns

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environment, evolution, political, technology

After so many recommendations to see this movie, I decided to spend a warm and sunny winter afternoon inside a theater with my wife. We saw Avatar in 3D, complete with nerd glasses. I think my wife looked better in them than I.

Avatar is a wonderfully imaginative tale that made me wonder if the blue humanoids on the screen are real, or created in a computer lab. Add the three-dimensional effect and the blur becomes even more distinct. The topography of the world of Pandora, complete with floating mountains and luminescent creatures piqued my senses and drew emotions out of me that I hadn’t felt in a very long time. The Featurette gives a sensational glimpse of this fantastic world (link to featurette at bottom of this blog post):

Courtesy 20th Century FOX

Courtesy 20th Century FOX

The repeated references to the connection of living beings to their home world gave me hope that those in the theater would be immersed in natural spirit and somehow be brought to a new sense of awareness through multimedia osmosis. At times I allowed my senses to connect to the world of Pandora, as I have many times connected with the energy of our wonderful creation, Mother Earth, and her creator. It’s a lovely feeling when I can draw on the cycle of life between predator and prey, birth and death, all the while enjoying the fullness of life. If I could have my wish, I would like to see a version of this movie that only focused on the connection-building scenes that help one appreciate her/his animal body and to relink thought to remember that our bodily vessels are made up of earthbound substances. It seems like in this age we are bombarded with images that seem to separate us from the natural world. In this train of thought lives the irresponsible consumerism that destroys our world at such a rapid pace. It is an important message for us to give reverence to our habitat. Though we may be able to create a new and wonderful world free of mosquitos on the big screen, creating one in real life is simply not possible.

The continuation of the movie brought scenes that were unfortunately cluttered with an all-too-predictable plot, which is repeated in so many mainstream Hollywood movies. That is, the 3D experience stopped at the visual element of the film. Instead of choosing a complex theme of blurring the line between what is good and bad, the people involved in making the movie decided to focus on a story between nature vs. the corporate world and its evil military muscle. It is again the linear thought of the creators of this film that forget that they benefit from the military might that they portray as evil. They enjoy the freedom of speech because they live under the umbrella of the most powerful nation and its military. They also enjoy the unlimited profits from capitalism that they represent in the film as the evil mining company who brings precious ore from the land of Pandora back home to its needy consumer base. I ask the producers to glance into a mirror and see that they are a part of what they depict as bad and wrong. They need to take some of the responsibility as well and stop depicting the military leaders as the happy arms of Satan. In contrast, a movie called Princess Mononoke put a human and caring face to the mining effort that was also destroying nature in its quest to expand. Perhaps the producer thought the mainstream American audience is too simple-minded to grasp a more involved plot?

By Hayao Miyazaki

Princess Mononoke by Hayao Miyazaki

For me, the most atrocious offense were the parents who brought small children to watch this film. How do we enlighten parents who decide to take kids to this show? As I was constantly negotiating with my emotions to keep everything in check under such powerful scenes and sounds, I could only wonder how still-developing minds of young children were being assaulted by trying to do the same, only to end up failing and crying. Certainly the corporate structure that the producers were attacking with the plot of this film are essentially guilty of the same gluttonous greed by not penalizing theaters for allowing children under 13 to view this movie. (The movie is rated PG-13, which I agree with).

Despite the overkill of missiles, battles and destruction, Avatar 3D brought awareness to the masses to realize that destroying the habitat, either alien or domestic, is a really bad thing. I only hope that the younger generation that is getting a full dose of this message from so many sources aren’t overly desensitized to forget that they should actually do something about it.

-Keitan

(Link to featurette: http://trailers.apple.com/trailers/fox/avatar/hd/)

The missing link from reformed health care

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economy, evolution, political

There’s been a lot of talk about what the right health care for this country should look like. But in all the things that I’ve read and heard, I’m not yet convinced that any of the options, present or proposed, would really make any difference for our population.

The need to encourage awareness of people’s own choices, and to understand the need for reform at the governmental level is grossly omitted from the picture. The decision making by the FDA to approve certain items that can be taken into the body needs a major overhaul. There is no health plan that won’t eventually bankrupt the wallets of hard-working people as long as the cheaper (more economical) grocery store choices can be major factors of obesity. And that only scratches the surface of other ills resulting from many rulings of the FDA, like: unknown genetically-modified food effects, aggressive marketing to children for food full of food coloring, toxic preservatives in vaccinations, etc. Over the long term these choices can get people into a culture of medications and the subsequent taking of other medications to counter side effects. This is living proof that we are, at our essence, an unhealthy nation.

Government’s role in the healthy guidance of proper diet is nowhere in the legislation of health care reform. Given the current state of national debt, we need to re-adopt the adage of “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” This way we could spend less “ounces” of federal dollars trying to solve such a behemoth issue in this country.

Before we can start on the path to a new national balanced diet, we must first work on the individual balanced lifestyle. We need to move away from the daily extremes that carry us away and find more sustainable choices. Some can go the path of making better external choices to affect the inner workings of the mind, and others can bring consciousness to the mind to then start making better choices. Either way, the current road of unhealthy choices needs an off ramp to start seeing a country’s landscape full of people who understand that being American means we’re intelligent, flexible and can be role models for each other and the world at large.

To your health! Keitan

Giving Peace Prizes

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acknowledgements, evolution, political

“Wasn’t there someone better to get this prize.” This was my first thought in response to hearing the news. It’s not at all that I don’t like Barack Obama. I think he’s the best choice for the job he has. That job also has an attached detail of being the commander in chief for the most powerful armed forces in the world. Peace prize and ‘one who authorizes missile launches’ didn’t seem to go together. That’s what bugged me.

I then though of the implications of award, and how it added pressure on him to rise to it. It’s not easy being a world-class leader in such a troubled world. Powerful countries are motivated by conquering divisions of resources, products and labor for economic survival. But in the spirit of hope, I was encouraged that he, Barack Obama, could actually start turning the tide toward a better common reality.

It’s a lofty goal, but it’s important to start down the path to a better existence for all life here on lovely Earth. I’m impressed by those bold enough to risk their reputation to give Barack Obama the Nobel Peace Prize. Let’s all hope it was a risk worth taking.

-Keitan

Homeopathy comes under attack

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environment, political

Below is an email that I sent to a group called Voices of Young Science, who wish to discredit and essentially destroy the art of homeopathy. I strongly encourage others to send an email to those responsible for this misinformation. Also, here is the link to the BBC article:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/8211925.stm

———————

Dear Sense About Science / Voices of Young Science,

After receiving a letter from a trusted source, I see that your organization is alarmed by the growth of homeopathy. From the articles I’ve read, your group sees this methodology as nothing more than placebo and should be extinguished.

I can understand that the tools by how things are currently measured can’t always detect the energetic principles that is the basis of how homeopathy works, but in the evolution of science, I find that many ‘laws’ are disproved when better tools of variable detection are available… rendering previous beliefs, theories and laws obsolete.

Your group is in danger of becoming discredited if it continues to pursue this path in attacking homeopathy as a pseudoscience. The undetectable variables that are not traceable with conventional tools do not conclusively mean that the energy of the remedies are ineffective.

If the goal of medicine is to create a more healthy patient, I challenge medicine to answer the larger question of the deleterious effects of pharmaceutical production which poisons our clean air and water. How does conventional medicine justify and rationalize the perpetual side effects of its remedies while destroying the habitat of the patients it is trying to help?

I do understand that homeopathic remedies resemble placebo to those who don’t wish to genuinely explore the methodology of the practice, but as a patient of classical homeopathy now for eight years, I can say that I am healthier and happier now in my forties than I can remember even back to my early twenties (even though I was quite skeptical at the onset of my homeopathic treatment). I haven’t needed (nor desired) to take a pharmaceutical remedy since I’ve started the homeopathic path and feel more free than the vast majority who are struggling to counteract all the side effects of traditional medicine. Homeopathy treats the psyche as well as the symptoms. I have benefited immensely in the treatment of my whole person.

If you are simply agents of the pharmaceutical industry, then you probably will simply delete this email as poppycock. But if you are truly scientists who search for objective knowledge in all things, then I implore you to try to research the science of homeopathy. It is a medicinal art as valid as the art of conventional medicine and worthy of further research in what it can contribute to the overall evolution of medicine.

Sincerely,

Keith Gonzalez
Coordinator of IT for Natural Sciences
College of Arts and Sciences IT
University of Oregon
Email: keithg@uoregon.edu

What happened to the Internet?

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political, technology

The historic American wild west has a new name. It’s as dangerous as the gun-slinging bandits that once terrorized the populations of dusty, desert small towns of the American frontier. Back then, innocent and daring people came to chase a promise of a better life. Sometimes, if they were not aware of all the dangers of the new territory, they would fall victim to the invaded and angered Native Americans, snake-oil salesmen, or claim-jumpers. These pitfalls were the obstacles to those who sought possible fortune and perhaps a simple and better life in the new American west.

Today, there’s no need to leave your living room to fall victim to the many perils. Nope, this time it is the spammers, phishing scammers, and viagra/lottery winning plunderers (among others) who pollute our electronic byways and brainwaves and trick the unwary many who populate the Net. This is the new Wild Wild Web. And after watching an hour of local news and being convinced that those who live in the local area are child molesters, murders and thieves, we turn to the Web to connect with like-minded individuals to feel safe and connected.

Most people have a hard time thinking of a life before Google, Facebook and Youtube. But these are new inventions on a fresh landscape. I reflect back to a time before our connected world. It was 1995. In the midst of using my speedy 2400 baud modem (that would literally take about 5 minutes to load this page), I used to connected to various cyber bulletin boards to leave messages for others, download funny graphics (no porn, thank you) and try interesting new software. Then, suddenly, something amazing happened. A peculiar invention was emerging from the educational realm into the public sector. It was called the World Wide Web. It let ambitious people make pages of text, bolded and italicized, that anyone in the world could reach. Back in 1995 there were no pictures to be seen, and all people had to know to get this new information was an address that started with http://.

Back then, to me, the world was full of promise. Ideas and beautiful concepts were now easily exchanged on this new mode of communication. I envisioned a new era as we slowly closed the chapter on the Industrial Age and began entering into something I called the Info-Communication Age. Fourteen years ago, I thought that mankind was about to embark on something that would evolve the species to an advanced level of connectedness and bring us all to something that resembled a digital version of Utopia. OMG, I was, like, you know, totally wrong! LOL ;-)

I can’t say that the present state of the Internet is a complete wasteland of the human mind, but I begin to worry when I see the English language reduced to half-witted Twitter entries. Private parties, in their opportunistic wisdom, have made draconian Terms of Service language that basically say, “I own you and all the information you put online.” The majority of people simply click the checkbox to sign their life away for the sake of an experiential chance to connect with someone who they can relate with.

Alas, all is not lost. Among the “lost tribe” are intelligent individuals who still care about the population as a whole. Let me name a few advances in the ethereal Internet that has helped regular people become more empowered:

- Consumer ratings on popular websites that help regular people research products before buying

- Instant communication via email, despite all the scams that try to trick the unwary

- The ability to find alternative news to verify facts

- Collective mind projects like Wikipedia.org

- Weather for any city in just a few clicks

- Virtually tons of useful information, i.e. if you learn how to weed through the false stuff

- craigslist.org (outside of all the marginally-sleazy dating stuff)

- Be careful. Facebook owns all your information… forever. Just read the first paragraph of “User Content Posted on the Site” in their Terms of Service.

The personal computer is still a LONG way from being a simple and reliable appliance like a microwave oven, but as we move forward in technology it is my hope that people become aware of the dangers of not protecting their information. I also hope that people gain back the power to help guide the mega-corporations to provide us with the tools that we deserve to make the world with the help of technology. But in the same breath, it is my fear that if we continue to close our minds to the responsibility of our place as collective consumers and citizens, we risk losing our collective voice and end up being organic members of a machine that has cameras and microphones everywhere that can observe our every movement, and correct us when we step out of line of the corporate structure.

Now is the time to become aware and responsible for where we are headed. We are at the crossroads. Which way are you choosing?

-keitan

2012 – Coming soon to a universe near you

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environment, evolution, political

 

             The year 2012 and the month of December is approaching. It seems far off, but with the acceleration of time these days it’s going to be here before we realize. For those who still don’t know what 2012 is all about, here is a brief synopsis, and a link to the wiki article…

             Supposedly the ancient Mayans in charge of creating a extremely accurate calendar did a wonderful job, but they stopped at a point which translates to mid-December of 2012 in the Julian-Gregorian calendar that we all use in the West. The reason for the end of the calendar is that there was no point going beyond this date, according to the Mayans. Some have translated this to mean that the earth is going to end, time recycles back to its starting point, or that humanity (and everything else) is going to start into a brand new era of being. That’s where the speculation begins to get interesting. There are books galore that can tell you all about what the relevance of 2012 is, but should you believe any of these writings?

             Recently I visited the planetarium and spoke with the director of the facility. She is a professional astronomer in Eugene, Oregon. We had a chat about the stars, planets and such, and I asked her if the stars change position over the thousands of years of humans watching them. She informed me that besides a few small deviations, the stars are where they were from our perspective as long as humans have scurried on planet earth. I then asked her about any astronomical evidence that would support the Mayan calendar from a universal point of view. I thought that if we were approaching a starting point as referenced from our position in the galaxy or larger sphere, it might give some credence to what is being tossed around as a life-changing event for all of us. After considerable thought, reflecting and calculating, she could offer no correlation to an astronomical event. I thanked her for her time and knowledge.

             So, that is one scientific opinion that would scrap any notion that December 2012 is going to produce anything more than the puff of smoke that came with the Y2K bug that was supposed to bring civilization to its knees.

             But if I could offer a couple of examples that would point to a significant event, it would be these two:

  • Time is moving faster and faster. I can easily remember a time when I was bored and watched the clock, but those lazy days are far gone. Now I have trouble doing the relatively same tasks in a day, as I always run out of time. I could expand on this and say that if we were a grain of sand in an hourglass of time, we wouldn’t notice the passage of time if we were near the top of the heap. But once we get closer to the bottleneck, things start to really accelerate by our perspective and become more rapid as we get closer to that point. Now, I could blame all the technology that ’steals’ our time by giving us more and more information to assimilate, but that wouldn’t be as interesting…
  • We are becoming more aware. OK, not all of us. Watching ‘Family Guy’ or reality programming doesn’t seem to do much for the evolution of the mind, but I have noticed that people are becoming more aware of what is going on around them. The fact that we now have a president that is full of promise to make our lives better and more in balance with the earth is also proof that the majority of people are ready to move into a new era of being on this planet. Time tells if we can actually make it in time before things get too bad too quickly. 

             In conclusion, 2012 can be a major event where everything is different. Maybe we all get to read each others’ thoughts, or maybe Jupiter collapses into a star and we have perpetual daylight. Ya, a lot could happen that would get us all driving solar-hybrid-garbage processing Toyotas, but I am just going to live well, love lots, and wait and see.

             Links: Wikipedia (scroll down to “2012 geophysical and cosmological speculations”) or Nay-sayer or the Mayan-Hindu connection. Take your pick!

             Please see that survey poll on the left side of this website to have your say.

          -Keitan

Getting the idea in front of the president

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economy, political

Today I discovered that the change.gov website of president-elect Barack Obama opened a new part. They are collecting ideas to compile a list of the best voted and though out ideas to present to the president-to-be when he enters office. I am hoping that this may be a great way to get the idea of Avacafe in front of him so he and his cabinet can see something that can transform our economy and create income for all of us.

Please read the post below called “Better ideas than stimulated bailouts” to get more information about the Avacafe system of how it can pay all of us for surveys from companies. You can also get even more information at http://www.avacafe.com/

Then go to the Change.gov’s “Citizen’s Briefing Book” at http://citizensbriefingbook.change.gov/ and search for: Information saves the economy

This brings you to my post. Vote it up and comment on it to help bring it to the forefront. Together we can make this happen!

-Keitan

Better ideas than stimulated bailouts

1 Comment
economy, political

What mystery lies behind the hands that take our money to try to improve a titanic ship that sails in an economic sea of icebergs? As the activity of commerce slows, this is the time of contemplation and thought of how to build a system that is sustainable and responsible. The earth takes a sigh of relief from the human exploitation with this downturn and we hope that our illustrious leaders take notice that what we voted for was a real change. The manufacture of cheap products that produce poisons to our habitat is no longer applicable. And though we can complain much about the things that they do wrong, such idle chatter brings forth little progress.

Amongst the people there has been discussion about a simple and amazingly powerful idea. As Barack Obama prepares to inherit the largest mess in decades we hope to make him see the change we voted for. It’s not easy to get grass roots solutions through all the people and special interests that surround him, but the Internet has shown a special strength among the common people. One email can spread like wildfire to dozens, hundreds, thousands and even millions. And together our voices can be heard through all the white noise. If we come together on some basic principles of real change for our country there is nothing they can do but listen. Here is the basic idea along with the delivery method:

How to save the economy:

  1. Pay people for their information through group interest surveys. People register and list their demographics and interests to join other similar people in survey groups to sell their information and get paid for their time. Companies pay targeted consumers to fill out surveys on how to develop new products and services. Consumers guarantee their interest and attention to accurate answers. Surveying pays consumers $0.34 per minute of survey ($20/hour).
  2. Consumers donate at least 10% of their survey income to the non-profit of their choice.
  3. The central government funds the initial development of the survey system and guarantees that the information of the public remains owned by the public. As the system grows, 5% of the survey income of consumers is dedicated to the further development of the system.
  4. Non-profit entities are completely transparent in the use of the collected survey income allocated to them. This gives accountability to the public to see where our donation money is going.
  5. Companies finally get the information they have been wanting for pennies on the dollar of what they are used to paying. They spend less on marketing, and more on developing products that their consumers have asked for.
  6. Result: The economy becomes a true representation of the needs and desires of the population. Non-profits entities spend time mostly on their mission as they receive needed funding from this system. Companies produce more exacting amounts of product to meet need, thus reducing waste and expensive storage. The Avacafe idea enhances relationships between consumers and companies at the local level as well as a nationally. The idea can easily scale to a worldwide level.
How to deliver this message:
  1. All readers come together and enlist their email address to join the Avacafe OneVoice Movement. The author of this site (Keitan) produces the sign-up form. No name is necessary to participate. Sign up with an email with a no-spam / no-sharing promise. Emails are only collected for the reason of notification of the idea outlined above to the White House.
  2. Keitan and his team prepare the Avacafe message for the White House and the public, showing the earning potential of survey income, benefit to non-profits and companies, and also prepares open communication to the public once the Obama Administration contacts Keitan and the Avacafe developers.
  3. Mass Emailing to the White House. This is the moment of promise and action. Once the idea is ready for presentation to the Administration, each person who signed up receives an email from Avacafe that the time has come to send an email to president@whitehouse.gov (or whatever the current address is at that time to the White House) to send a message there. The message that everyone must then send is:
    Email Subject: Yes We Can Save the Economy
    Email Message: The collective consumer body of this country urges President Obama’s Administration to visit Avacafe.com for a solution to the economic crisis.
  4. Then we wait for a response.
In Summary:
The idea prescribed above is free of political affiliation, and only serves to provide a fresh alternative to the Administration to get real solutions on the table. Everyone wins under the Avacafe idea and it doesn’t cost billions of dollars to construct. Companies benefit, organizations benefit and the entire public finally gets a chance to get paid for their information. Most importantly, the economy changes course and begins a new path of sustainable abundance.
For more information, please visit http://www.avacafe.com/ and don’t forget to tell your friends to sign up. If you can reach at least 100 people, this plan can really take shape. America is about innovation and leadership. Now is our chance to make that happen once again!
Sincerely, Keith Gonzalez (Keitan), founder of Avacafe.

Defibrillation for a broken economy

2 Comments
environment, political

 

            While the national and world leaders try to tell us that they are going to stimulate the economy with whatever method they have at their hands, it’s hard for me to believe that any one or group of humans can do anything to change the natural course of this beaten and battered financial system. It doesn’t matter if it is the economy, the crime levels or the amount of babies being born. Everything that lives inhales and exhales until its final transition to cessation. That goes for amoebas all the way up to these whopping social systems created and maintained by us. As far as our leaders are concerned, even though I voted for Barack Obama, I have little faith in the fact that he can use conventional people in high status positions to show us the way to prosperity. These people gained their status and power from playing the rules of the game that no longer apply. How can the group of them dig us out of this hole? No, the only thing that they can do is keep bleeding our tax money into their pockets and the pockets of the larger corporations. They are putting band-aids on a hemorrhaging patient. And when an amputation is called for to save the patient, do they dare cut off their own legs to save the rest of us? Likely not.

             Now, what good would my rant be without a suggestion? I do believe them when they say that this is the biggest threat to our lifestyles since The Great Depression. One thing that I noticed between now and then is this: Back then the industrial revolution was just cranking up. Factories were being built to produce stuff in ways that could reach the households of every middle class family. Commonly gotten electricity and phones were only a couple of decades old, and cars were just starting to be produced to have one parked in every driveway. It was a massive shift in the way humans lived. It was the beginning of stuff and luxurious living for the common person. Then someone said “BOO!” and the stock market crashed. Yes, they improved the reliability of that system as it stumbled many times with boom and crashes until today. Don’t forget that the world back then was enthralled in a geopolitical chess game of regional and world wars.

             Today, we are going through something very similar with the advent of the Information-Communication age. Few of us can imagine what the world would be like without computers, let alone the ‘miracle’ of Google. The effectiveness of my skills at my job wouldn’t be the same without the Internet. So, yes, we are shifting again in consciousness and how we live. And yes, we are all going to suffer (some much greater than others) while our leaders try to figure out what the heck is going on. Oh, and by the way, the world is in the throes of geopolitically fueled regional wars over resources. Hmm, haven’t we been here before?

             The good news and the bad news: In a few years we are going to enter a new era of interacting and living with each other. Words like ‘nano’ and ‘google’ are going to replace ‘plastic’ and ‘yellow pages.’ But what I am worried about the most is the implementation of all these new technologies. We’ve never been so close to the edge of bringing forth such beautiful new systems to improve the lifestyle of so many, yet be so close to the edge of darkness from these same inventions. Moral responsibility is so needed as we go through this transition. I keep my fingers crossed.

             My suggestion to any world leaders out there: Economy is about living things in action. It doesn’t matter if it is rebuilding from the destruction of war, or rebuilding from the destruction of our actions of the Industrial Age. The economy is good as long as people have work with a purpose. I can think of nothing more important than repairing the habitat damage so we can continue to grow. That means also feeding and teaching third world countries how to do things right, but not until we are on that path ourselves. Information is the new money, and systems have to be implemented that create a new relationship between people’s information and manufacturing. A currency that is directly tied to the health of the planet is also the critical step to real change. Yes, I can go into fine detail, but is anyone listening? I hope the world leaders get a hint of writings like this and others that are calling for real change. That is what I voted for, after all. I say, let the economy die. From the ashes of its cremation can rise the Phoenix to bring a new light and breath for a better and more sustainable future.

-keitan

PS, Happy Solstice! Welcome the longer days with thoughts of hope.

The Barack Obama watch

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political

     Last Tuesday night, I was thrilled about the election results. It was only a few days prior to the election that I watched his 30-minute infomercial and decided to buy-in to his campaign. It was the first time that I gave any money to a presidential candidate. The main thing that resounded in me was the fact that he wishes to tax companies that outsource their products and services outside the United States, while giving tax breaks to companies who are trying to make products and services (and jobs!) here in our country. To me, it was the step in the right direction, and without any detailed plan from the McPalin campaign,  my vote was easily decided.

     Aside from the superstar-like energy following the definitive presidential win, and the subsequent surge of democrats elected across the country, I am feeling good about reversing a lot of draconian policies set in place from the last 8 years. But I have a strong practical side, so I continue with trepidation as the government moves forwards into a new direction.

     Since I am well founded in the energetic practices and influences of our human existence, it seemed clear that the first order of business was to get an astrological birth chart of Barack Obama. With the help of my friend, she found his birth certificate online (thanks Lynne!), and I used my favorite online birth chart calculator (at http://alabe.com/freechart/) to get a basic map of his chart.

     For those of you who think that Astrology is quackery, I agree with you that daily newspaper horoscopes have little foundation in scientific logic. But when you take the birth chart of a person, and where all the heavenly bodies were at the time of birth, indisputable correlations appear. And once I get mostly done with all my other ‘earth-changing’ projects, I hope to launch an astrological birth chart database to help bring scientific method to the art of astrology.

     That all said, below is the link to the result of Barack Obama’s birth chart. Most interesting features is that he is a Leo (like many presidents have been). Leo is symbolized by the Sun, and it can be said that they are great leaders with lots of fire. This is tempered with his rising sign, which is Aquarius. The long promised Age of Aquarius comes to mind, and this is enhanced with his Jupiter (planet that symbolizes one’s approach to global issues), and Jupiter just entered into Aquarius on his birth. His Mars is in Virgo, which means practical approaches to conflict, and his Mercury (communication planet) is also in Leo, which means that he speech technique is that of a leader, which has been noted specifically with his acceptance speech.

     I can go on and on, but instead click the PDF link below to get more information.

-keitan

Barack Obama birth chart