Month: November, 2013

Scorpio Sun, Capricorn Moon: The Lone Survivor and the Last Woman Standing, the Anarchist Emeritus and the Atom Bomb A-Team

(Image: Robert F. Kennedy, source unknown)

Scorpio is the sign of Shaman and the Spy, the Hitman and the Detective, the Investment Banker and the Depth Psychologist, the Covert Op and the Deep Cover Cop. Co-ruled by Mars (the Lord of War) and Pluto (the Lord of the Underworld), Scorpio is the sign least likely to fear death. Astrologer Frances Sakoian warns, “In battle they will give no quarter and expect none. If one takes up cudgels against a Scorpio, he should be well fortified.” (Source) To illustrate: using its release date as its date of birth, the original Terminator film has its Sun, Pluto, Mercury, and Saturn all in Scorpio. (Chart) The film stars Arnold Schwarzenegger as the “T-800” model Terminator — a heavily fortified, totally determined hitman from the future who gives no quarter and whose cybernetic brain possesses no fear of death:

According to astrologer Judy Hall, people with their Sun (conscious identity) in this intensely secretive sign make for great undertakers and insurance agents. (Source) They also do well in any career that requires infiltration, such as working for the internal affairs department of a Fortune 500 corporation. Schwarzenegger’s Scorpionic alter-ego the T-800 is not a literal undertaker or corporate insurance agent but its mission to infiltrate (Scorpio) the past and assassinate (Scorpio) Sarah Connor is designed to insure (Scorpio) that things goes as planned for a massive defense contractor known as the Cyberdyne Corporation. Scorpio, ruled by Pluto, is also considered the sign having dominion over nuclear energy. (Source) Not coincidentally, the T-800 is powered by an internal nuclear reactor that sits in its solar plexus region behind heavy armor. Human Scorpios are powered by similarly powerful, if intensely guarded, sources of energy.

Sitting 60 degrees from Scorpio is Capricorn, the sign of responsibility, realism, and relentless determination. This is the sign of the Prime Minister, the Authority Figure, the Strategist, the Business Man, the General, the CEO, and the Director. Ecologically, Capricorn is the sign of the winter solstice, a time of the year when supplies may be getting short and members of the tribe may be in danger of succumbing to the elements both physical and emotional. In order to make it through the winter, the remaining provisions must be utilized judiciously while movements of survivors must be managed strategically. This is why the Moon (emotional needs) is considered “in detriment” when in Capricorn. Soul-crushing experiences that would break the spirits of other Moon signs are actually emotionally nourishing to the Capricorn Moon. This is the one lunar placement that actually “switches on” during times of austerity. Abraham Lincoln is a high profile but fundamentally representative Capricorn Moon. (Chart) He grew up amid austere circumstances and went on to lead the U.S. through the Civil War, an extraordinarily dark time that required extremely strategic management of both soldiers and civilians. In 2012 Lincoln was portrayed by Daniel Day Lewis in the film bearing his name:

Combine the psychological intensity of a Scorpio Sun with the strategic instincts of a Capricorn Moon and the result is a Sun/Moon pairing that’s self-disciplined, self-controlled, single-minded and serious to the point of being militant. Intense and brooding, highly responsible and naturally adept at “realpolitik”, this is a potentially ruthless Sun/Moon pairing that has “something of the devil” in their soul according to astrologer Jefferson Anderson. (Source) To illustrate: General George Patton is Scorpio Sun, Capricorn Moon. (Chart) Nicknamed “Ol’ Blood and Guts”, Patton was responsible for a number of America’s most important victories over the Nazis during World War II. In true Scorpio/Capricorn fashion it’s been said that Patton “out Blitzkreiged the inventors of the Blitzkreig”. Nazi generals admitted they feared him more than the devil himself. (Source) In 1970 Patton was portrayed to great effect by George C. Scott in the film bearing his name:

For this pairing, power (Scorpio) and respect (Capricorn), cunning (Scorpio) and hard work (Capricorn) are the undisputed currencies of the realm. A few quotes from George Patton summarize the tenacious if somber Scorpio/Capricorn modus operandi quite effectively:

The test of success is not what you do when you are on top. Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom. The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his. A good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week.

Astrologer Stella Hyde says Scorpios make for great secret agents, samurais, interrogators and professional assassins while Capricorn Moons are emotionally nourished by occupations such as horror-story writing, satanism, and grave robbing. (Source) Lieutenant Colonel Robert K. Brown is a Scorpio/Capricorn. (Chart) He’s best known for establishing Soldier of Fortune magazine, an extraordinarily controversial publication that has long catered to professional mercenaries, weapons lovers, and war-fanatics. During the 1980s Brown and people associated with his magazine were involved in training, arming, and raising money for the Contras in Nicaragua and the Mujahideen in Afghanistan — CIA connected groups that did make use of assassinations, interrogations, and other methods more than a bit reminiscent of those employed by satanists, grave-robbers, and characters straight out of Stephen King horror stories. As far as whether Brown has “something of the devil in his soul”, George Orwell once said “by the time he’s 50 years old a man has the face he deserves.”

Anybody to left of G. Gordon Liddy and Oliver North is likely to find Mr. Brown an off-putting character, to put it mildly. (This is doubly the case if you’ve done much reading on the geopolitics of Central America and Central Asia during the 1980s.) There is, however, no doubting his resourcefulness or capacity to utilize the protections of the first amendment to their absolute limit — something even those of us more likely to admire Woodward and Bernstein than John Rambo and E. Howard Hunt can (grudgingly) appreciate. For instance, according to a recent article in Newsmax, in 1983 Brown published an interview with a KGB assassin known as “JAWS”, something the U.S. government had warned him against doing in the strongest possible language. When the KGB got wind of the article they recalled their assassin to Moscow and Brown “subsequently received a threatening letter from JAWS stating that he looked forward to a meeting in Central America”. (Source) Many Scorpio/Capricorns will find themselves in similar exchanges with their co-workers. To his credit, Brown spent a good deal of his own money attempting to get to the truth about what happened to American POWs in Vietnam. According to a recent profile of Brown in Maxim magazine:

Over the years, the colonel routinely sank his largesse back into financing whatever mission the magazine had embarked on. He says he personally spent more than $300,000 backing efforts to hunt for POWs he and many of his readers believed had been left behind after the Vietnam War. “And that was 30 years ago,” he notes. (Source)

Brown’s exploits at Soldier of Fortune are supposedly the inspiration for The Expendables, Sylvester Stallone’s violence laden film franchise about a team of mercenaries who appear to straddle the line between professional soldiers and murderous psychopaths — both of which are Scorpio/Capricorn archetypes. (Source) As Stallone’s character explains when deciding whether or not to accept a contract to overthrow a government in the Gulf of Mexico, “if the money’s right we don’t care where the job is”. (Source) That’s a pretty good approximation of the Scorpio/Capricorn approach to life should their unremitting desire for power (Scorpio) and material success (Capricorn) head stomp their sense of humanity into bits and pieces.

Even those Scorpio/Capricorns who dedicate their lives to the causes of peace and justice will do so with as much ferocity, passion, and determination as George Patton invested into fighting wars and Robert Brown has invested into mercenary work. Robert F. Kennedy (RFK), the brother of President John F. Kennedy, is a Scorpio Sun, Capricorn Moon. (Chart) During his time as the U.S. Attorney General, RFK was “known for his advocacy for the African-American Civil Rights Movement and crusade against organized crime”. (Source) In the late 1950s he wrote a book about high level political corruption entitled The Enemy Within, a title that suggests an armada of themes close to the heart of any Scorpio/Capricorn. Indira Ghandi, named “Woman of the Millennium” in a poll organised by the BBC in 1999, is also a Scorpio/Capricorn. (Chart) She was so tough that even Richard Nixon — a man roughly as ruthless as the aforementioned “JAWS” character — admitted he was afraid to go head-to-head with her:

Scorpio is ruled by Pluto, the planet of totality and extremes. Capricorn is ruled by Saturn, the planet of brass tack reality and long term karma. Sue Tompkins links this combination with the most extreme life circumstances imaginable such as “the full horrors of Auschwitz becoming known”, “Chernobyl blowing up”, “Wall Street crashing” along with “accelerated fears concerns the dangers of nuclear power or the possible threat of nuclear war”. (Source) If, God forbid, somebody ever plants a nuclear device in your town you’ll probably end up calling a Scorpio/Capricorn to come down and defuse it. Why a Scorpio/Capricorn? For two reasons: A) because only a Scorpio/Capricorn has the nerves of steel necessary to remain calm in such a situation and B) because, using its establishment date as its date of birth, the U.S. government’s Nuclear Emergency Support Team (NEST) is a Scorpio/Capricorn. (Chart) If you haven’t heard of NEST before — and very few people have — it’s a clandestine government agency comprised of approximately 600-800 scientists whose job it is to respond to nuclear threats. Scorpio and Capricorn are both very private signs so it makes sense that outside of Jeffery Richelson’s 2006 book Defusing Armageddon: Inside NEST, America’s Secret Nuclear Bomb Squad, almost nothing has been written about this real life doomsday version of the “Mission Impossible” force.

ScorpioCapricorn

Linda Goodman links Scorpio to “the process of death itself” and Capricorn to “all matters pertaining to the dead themselves”. Both signs, she says, “have a powerful affinity for deeply felt and long-held secrets”. (Source) NEST, for instance, is prepared to handle both the “process of death” and “matters pertaining to the dead” while the very fact of its existence is a deeply held, long-term secret. NEST agents may not literally have a bit of “Satan in their souls” but if being responsible for defusing nuclear bombs doesn’t count as dancing with the devil I’m not sure what does.

About the Author: Matt Savinar is a California licensed attorney (State Bar #228957), voluntarily inactive as of June 2013. He can be reached for questions, comments, or astrological consults at his contact page.

Scorpio Sun, Aries Moon: The Lone Crusader and the Last Valkyrie, the Shadow Warrior and the Splinter Cell, the Delta Force Operator and the Punk Rock Riot Protestor

(Image Credit: Tomb Raider video game, available for purchase at Amazon)

Combine the extreme intensity of a Scorpio Sun with the competitive instincts of an Aries Moon and you get a Sun/Moon pairing that is highly combative, hyper-individualistic, and always looking for a fight. Astrologer Bil Tierney says this pairing is “built for confrontation”. (Source) To illustrate: using its incorporation date as its date of birth, Boston Dynamics Inc. is a Scorpio/Aries. (Chart) They’re the company the Pentagon has contracted with to build what looks like the real life incarnation of “The Terminator”, the hyper-confrontational cyborg from the future famously portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Take a look:

Using its establishment date of 11/21/1977 as its date of birth, the U.S. Army’s 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta (aka the “Delta Force”) is also a Scorpio Sun, Aries Moon. (Chart) This undated photograph of four Delta Force “Operators” courtesy of the Department of Defense starkly summarizes the modus operandi of what might be the zodiac’s most dangerous Sun/Moon combination. Like the machines built by Boston Dynamics, Delta Force is an organization that’s very much “built for confrontation”:

Delta Force, established 11/21/77, is a Scorpio Sun, Aries Moon organization. (Photo courtesy DOD)

Scorpio and Aries form what’s known as a “quincunx”, a potentially volatile astrological aspect that’s as difficult to reconcile as it is to pronounce. Signs that quincunx each other are so different they may as well be from different planets if not different dimensions. About the only thing Scorpio and Aries have in common is they’re both ruled by Mars, the planet of war. (Aries is ruled by Mars, Scorpio is co-ruled by Mars and Pluto) As astrologer Linda Goodman explains in her book Love Signs, Scorpio fights like a ninja, Aries like a prize fighter:

Aries is the reckless, Mars-driven crusader, stirred emotionally by dedication to a cause, and the excitement of a dangerous mission. Scorpio is the seasoned veteran, possessing a deep sense of realities and the strength to endure hardships, with no illusions about the glamour of marching bands, uniforms, and decorations for bravery. Their strategies are very different. Aries defends fiercely, in the front lines. Scorpio attacks suddenly, unexpectedly, from the rear. (Source)

Combine the two together and get you a Sun/Moon pairing that will storm life by the front door, the back door, and all points in between — something this video about the Delta Force selection process makes abundantly clear. Using its original release date as its date of birth, spy novelist Tom Clancy’s best selling, reality based Splinter Cell video game franchise is a Scorpio Sun, Aries Moon every bit as confrontational in the imaginal alter-verse of video gaming as the Delta Force is in the very real three dimensional world of war-fighting. (Chart) According to Wikipedia, the series features themes that are both covert (Scorpio) and aggressive (Aries), “the game stars protagonist Sam Fisher as a highly trained agent of a fictional black-ops sub-division within the NSA.”

Using its original release date as its date of birth, the video game Tomb Raider is also a Scorpio/Aries. Like Splinter Cell, the game is full of action and adventure. It was also intensely (Scorpio) pioneering (Aries) in its own right as it was the first high-profile video game to feature a female character — Lara Croft — as its protagonist.

Have a knuckle dragging, uber-Republican, pro-Haliburton, pro Dick Cheney type in your family who thinks astrology is just a bunch of bunk? Tell them that the U.S. Delta Force and/or Splinter Cell are both Scorpio Sun, Aries Moons — then read to them what Charles and Suzi Harvey have to say about this combination, then sit back and watch their jaws drop as low as their knuckles:

Fight! Fight! Fight! You rally to the call of battle of any kind with unstoppable courage and determination. Yet you can also find conflicts where others see none . . . you are one of life’s warriors, and when you can bring together the fighter and the strategist, you are well-nigh invincible.

You may find yourself caught between a smouldering, silent intensity and a need to get out there, guns blazing, and tell the world what you are going to do – shooting straight from the hip.

. . . you are never frightened to mix it up with those who cross your path. Both friends and enemies think of you as somebody who can be relied upon in a corner to rally to the barricades. . . (Source)

Even those Scorpio/Aries individuals who are completely opposed to militarism will take an intensely “guns blazing” approach to their opposition. To illustrate: using the group’s formation date as its date of birth, the “Free P***y Riot” (FPR) is a Scorpio Sun, Aries Moon. (Chart) The FPR are a hyper-confrontational, pro-feminist, pro-LGBT, Russian punk rock political protest group, not an American special forces group, but given the ruthless approach Vladimir Putin takes to his political opponents there’s no doubting their willingness to “mix it up” or to “rally to the barricades” in aid of their cause. Like the members of the Delta Force, the missions the FPR go on are dangerous enough that its members must disguise their identities. Like Tom Clancy’s spy thriller video game series, FPR is also something of a “splinter cell”, one whose members have landed in prison as a result of their efforts:

Unfortunately, always being ready to “rally to the barricades” with “guns blazing” ready to “fight, fight, fight” comes with a deep cost. Life is a jungle for many (most?) Scorpio/Aries natives which is also why you’ll find a disproportionate number who suffer from stress disorders. Grant Lewi cautions his readers, “This combination has a high temper which can be explosive to the danger point . . .” (Source)

Scorpio/Aries Martin Luther is a 16th century German monk, priest, and professor of theology who went to war against the moneyed corruption of the church. (Source) For his efforts he was excommunicated by the Pope and condemned as an “outlaw” by the Emperor of Rome. Luther also married a runaway nun, which should give you an idea of the type of romantic partner many Scorpio/Aries men are attracted to. Legendary blogger-provocateur Matt Drudge is a Scorpio/Aries whose made a career doing to the establishment media what Martin Luther did to the Church. Even those of us who find his brand of politics profoundly distasteful can recognize that he’s certainly “rallied to the barricades” in defense of free speech and independent media. In fact, during the late 1990s he so effectively rallied to the barricades of free speech that he became Bill and Hilary Clinton’s public enemy number one. At the time the Clintons were at the peak of their power while Drudge was still working a low wage job to support himself. One need not agree with his politics to recognize that only a person with intense (Scorpio) levels of courage (Aries Moon) would have dared to do that.

About the Author: Matthew David Savinar is a California licensed attorney (State Bar #228957), voluntarily inactive as of June 2013. He can be reached for questions, comments, or astrological consults via Twitter, his first YouTube channel, his second YouTube channel, SoundCloud, LibSyn or this site’s contact page.

The premier issue of Hexagon, now shipping:

Matt Savinar, Novalee Truesdell, and Carrie Davoli on the premier issue of Hexagon

Follow on Instagram