Sunday, February 21, 2021

The Unreliables

Some concerned folks have changed the name of the modern green "renewable" energy sources to the "Unreliables." The Texas energy disaster reinforces that view.

The Lone Star State has Saturn, Neptune, and Venus in Aquarius and  Mercury, Sun, and Moon in Saturn's sign, Capricorn. The Sun almost exactly squares Uranus in Aries.

Uranus, the astrological ruler of electricity, is in earthy Taurus currently, and an exact square aspect to Saturn in airy Aquarius, governing wind, was underway when Texas blew. Both wind and traditional under earth energy sources were affected. Frozen windmills and overall system parts, along with voltage irregularities caused massive outages.

People crave reliability but we all know there is no guarantee of that. Uranus is known for the unexpected. This uppity planet can reflect major disruptions in the status quo.

Uranus and Aquarius rule alternative technologies while Saturn identifies traditional and reliable ones. In keeping with the state's Aquarius-Capricorn combo, Texas has vast fossil fuel reserves but has been leaning toward windmills. Tilting, one could say. Both were implicated in this event along with another major culprit; human error.

Nature and Man are both at odds and in harmony. There are many trade offs. Uranus has certainly lived up to its reputation as an awakener. Perhaps Saturn's responsibility can eventually settle this conflicted square.

Saturn in Aquarius square Uranus in Taurus set in motion a Saturnian recognition of reality concerning the Unreliables. They can still be useful but intelligence and reason, Uranus and Saturn, might be the real Reliables going forward.

5 Comments:

Blogger Tseka said...

I had to read this a few times.
All that Capricorn and Aquarius with a bit of Aries.
I even went to read birth of the Republic of Texas chart - I expected more Leo. The big hearts, tall hats, the bravado.

Grit, determination.
B & I talked about it.
His Texan take: yep, the settlers were tough but his image of it was that after mile upon endless treeless, barren miles, the horse were shot. At the next river the driver looked over to the little gal settin' next to him and said we're stoppin' here or the horses die.
They did what they could to put together something and over time built on it.

That sounds like a lot of Capricorn determination.

As to the unreliables, we can only hope that a strong Texan channels his ancestor, “We're done with that!”

The California fires had us all without power in extreme heat. A very similar situation.

Fed-up is a pretty good starting point.

22/2/21 5:04 PM  
Blogger Tseka said...

Dissident voices.
Florida said we're done with masks and lock downs, other states have as well. They look healthy and happy.
No more cowering to irrational mandates.
Allowing emission charts determine electric outputs, unreliable energy in extreme conditions is just part. Decisions made by board members who are not even living in Texas? Really?

Let's throw in weighted vote algorithms.

I have a long list.

We have fallen far and finally people are noticing.

Remember the little old ladies in tennis shoes?
Our time has arrived Sweet T.

22/2/21 5:21 PM  
Blogger jm said...

Excellent. I am ready and able, and as you point out....willing.

I have the Florida analysis ready. You won't be surprised.

The subsidies lured Texas but true to their map, they wised up. "Lone Star".... independent, first, pioneer. Probably leading the way to renewable Capricorn reality.

Renews work in pockets, but not for large populations.

Capricorn is great in harsh circumstances. And practical. "We need our darn horses. We'll make it."

"We're done with that! Enough is too much," says the great Texas ancestor.

22/2/21 6:03 PM  
Blogger Tseka said...

You bet your boots!

Looking forward to your wisdom on Florida.

Thanks a bunch! This is so fun.

22/2/21 6:38 PM  
Blogger jm said...

Btw, Texas has Mars in Aries conjunct Uranus.
It's the only state in the country with an independent power grid. There's a western grid, and eastern grid, and a Texas grid!

23/2/21 1:11 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home