Politics Are a Mess. Astrologers Say Look to the Planets.

Three astrologers tell us what to expect in 2020 and beyond

Atoosa Moinzadeh
GEN

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Illustration: Terrell Davis

“T“Thank you so much for not being the 1,000th person to ask me what sign each Friends character would be,” astrologer Jessica Lanyadoo says with relief over the phone. The current rise of astrology in popular culture, thanks in part to the internet, means that Lanyadoo spends significant time fielding hundreds of these kinds of requests. But on Ghost of a Podcast, where she offers mystical and practical advice to listeners, Lanyadoo often focuses on something else: the state of our country. “Every word out of the President of the United States’ mouth, every word in his Twitter feed…” she says, “I am taking the astrological indicators very seriously.”

Studying the movements of celestial objects and using those patterns to make sense of events on Earth—a practice specifically known as “mundane astrology”—predates sun sign astrology and personal horoscopes. In uncertain times, rulers and politicians have long turned to the stars to council them on when to go to war and when to make peace. Elizabeth I had John Dee, who predicted the end of the reign of her sister, Mary Tudor; the Reagan White House had Joan Quigley to advise on the most auspicious times to give speeches, engage in debates, or even travel on Air Force One.

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Atoosa Moinzadeh
GEN
Writer for

Atoosa Moinzadeh is a music and culture writer based in Brooklyn, NY. // atoosasmoinzadeh.com