I keep noticing horoscope links on the bottom of many news sites I visit, including the CBC.
I don't know about anyone else, but it strikes me as absurd and ironic that people are reading this superstitious nonsense on their iPhones and computers. Like, "you're using science but are still believing in this babble."
Literal Babel, actually. Even the systems of horoscope are out of calibration. There's a thing called the precession of the equinox (astronomical phenomenon involving the wobble of the Earth's axis) that, after 4000 years, has thrown the clockwork of "horoscopes" out of whack by two houses. But rather than admit even that error the astrologers will claim they're now working off some abstract thing rather than the actual position of the actual sun and the stars.
Do you get it?
When they say "Jupiter is entering Aries" or whatever, it probably isn't. Their charts have been drifting out of alignment like a neglected Seiko. So not only can they not predict your life correctly, they're not even correct about where the planets and stars are that they claim are influencing your life.
And that's even if you were inclined to give it any credence in the first place.
Anyway, I get that there'll be the superstitious who still believe in this stuff, and the healing power of magnets and silver and all that, but so much that it's still a staple of so many major news outlets? (Even as society supposedly becomes more secular no less?)
I don't know about anyone else, but it strikes me as absurd and ironic that people are reading this superstitious nonsense on their iPhones and computers. Like, "you're using science but are still believing in this babble."
Literal Babel, actually. Even the systems of horoscope are out of calibration. There's a thing called the precession of the equinox (astronomical phenomenon involving the wobble of the Earth's axis) that, after 4000 years, has thrown the clockwork of "horoscopes" out of whack by two houses. But rather than admit even that error the astrologers will claim they're now working off some abstract thing rather than the actual position of the actual sun and the stars.
Do you get it?
When they say "Jupiter is entering Aries" or whatever, it probably isn't. Their charts have been drifting out of alignment like a neglected Seiko. So not only can they not predict your life correctly, they're not even correct about where the planets and stars are that they claim are influencing your life.
And that's even if you were inclined to give it any credence in the first place.
Anyway, I get that there'll be the superstitious who still believe in this stuff, and the healing power of magnets and silver and all that, but so much that it's still a staple of so many major news outlets? (Even as society supposedly becomes more secular no less?)





