Sunday, August 23, 2020

When Jupiter conjuncts Saturn during an Election Year, the President likely dies in Office





The Saturn - Jupiter conjunction and the death of US Presidents

Since 1840 in the astrological chart on the United States, the alignment of Saturn and Jupiter has reoccurred at twenty year intervals. Unfortunately every president elected during those periods has died in office.

William Henry Harrison elected 1840 died of pneumonia 1841
Abraham Lincoln elected 1860 assassinated 1865
James Garfield elected 1880 assassinated 1881
William McKinley elected 1900 assassinated 1901
Warren Harding elected 1920 died in 1923
Franklin Roosevelt elected 1940 died 1945
John Kennedy elected 1960 assassinated 1963

Both Ronald Reagan in 1980 and George Bush in 2000 had assassination attempts on their lives, but both survived.

The next Great Conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter is December 21, 2020. Donald Trump is seeking re-election on November 3, 2020.

https://vibe.twice.se/astro-article-s...

Source link: https://astrologyking.com/jupiter-con... Archived link: http://web.archive.org/web/2019092700...
"Jupiter conjunct Saturn is also known as the Great Conjunction that happens on average every 19 years. Throughout history, it has been closely observed by astrologers and been linked to the rise and fall of royalty, leaders and great people. Some believe that the biblical “Star of Bethlehem” was the great conjunction of 7 B.C. [1]

According to astrologer Daniel T. Ferrera, when a great conjunction occurs during an election or inauguration year, the president is likely to die in office. [2] The table at the end of this article shows this has been the case since 1940 [or 1840], except for the last two great conjunctions. However, there were assassination attempts against both those presidents.

The next great conjunction is on December 21, 2020. The next United States presidential election is on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. President Donald Trump is seeking reelection to a second term."

4 comments:

  1. Very interesting information, thank you!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Going back only to 1940? What about decades of elections before that?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I don't think there was an assassination before that.

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