Subject: And some retroastrology.
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Posted on: 2016-09-20 14:25:00 UTC

So there used to be - might still be? - an alarming habit among people who purportedly believed in astrology of tweaking people's birth-dates and -times to give them more favorable charts. This also applied when choosing a 'birthdate' for people you don't actually know it for.

Well, as it happens, I don't know precisely when the PPC was founded. But I do know that its chart should absolutely feature Uranus in the 7th house (ie, that it's a group built around partnership), which will form a trine with the sun in the 11th house (ie, that the whole core of the setting is friendship). So when do we have to have been 'born' for that to happen?



June 15th, 2002! (That's a little late for the actual founding of the PPC, so maybe it's the date of our reappearance after Harpwire was deleted. Or it could be the founding of the Board!)

And what an auspicious natal chart we fake get. The combination I mentioned exists (obviously), but we also have Uranus forming a square (stressful!) with Mercury in the 10th house. That means the whole partnership thing is stressed by the agents' love of canon - that is, missions are a strain! Uranus is also in opposition to the moon, over in the 1st house - that means an emotional centre is reinforcing the whole partnership scheme.

Nor is that the only interaction of the moon. The emotional heart of the PPC is in a sextile with Saturn in the 11th house - yes, those emotions are drawn from and feeding into a combination that literally comes out as 'working friendships' - an excellent description of the PPC! Saturn is opposed by Pluto in the 4th house, which can be described as 'change at home' - certainly something that happens to our agents!

Elsewhere, Mercury's love of canon sits in a sextile with a curious factor: Venus in the 12th house, suggesting the self-negation of love. Can there be any better description of a Mary-Sue? We all know that encountering a Suvian only strengthens our love for canon.

All in all, this chart paints a picture of canon-loving agents, close friends with their partners but stressed out, fighting against Suvians and an unusual, transformative home. Moreover, it tells us that we all absolutely love it.



And that is why astrology is such a nifty gimmick. If you know the person (or organisation!) you're writing about, you can pretty much turn anything into an accurate horoscope for them. Like Tarot, runes, and whatever that thing's called where you throw crystals around and look for patterns, you get out whatever you choose to put in.

hS

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