Big Data Is Watching and Corporate Media Doesn’t Care

As the second Trump administration is dispatching its minions to stalk U.S. streets, smashing citizens’ First Amendment rights, in partnership with unregulated Big Tech, it also surveils online, helping itself to citizens’ personal identifiable information (PII).

In the age of surveillance capitalism, information is a hot commodity for corporations and governments, precipitating a multi-billion-dollar industry that not only profits from the collection and commodification of citizens’ PII, but also puts individuals, businesses, organizations and governments at risk for cyberattacks and data theft.

Social Security numbers, location details, health information, student loan and financial data, purchasing habits, library borrowing and internet browsing history, and political and religious affiliations are just some of the personal information that data brokers buy and sell to advertisers, banks, insurance companies, mortgage brokers, law enforcement and government agencies, foreign agents and even spammers, scammers and stalkers. Over time, that information often ends up changing hands again and again.

As an example, and to the alarm of civil liberties experts, the Airlines Reporting Corporation (ARC), “a shady data broker” owned by at least eight U.S.-based commercial airlines, including Delta, American and United, has been collecting U.S. travelers’ domestic flight records and selling them to Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Homeland Security, and as part of the deal, government officials are forbidden to reveal how ARC sourced the flight data.

Online users should know that many data brokers camp out on Facebook and at Google’s advertising exchange, drawing from such sources as credit card transactions, frequent shopper loyalty programs, bankruptcy filings, vehicle registration records, employment records, military service, and social media posting and web tracking data harvested from websites, apps, and mobile and wearable biometric devices to “craft customized lists of potential targets.” Even when gathered data is de-identified, privacy experts warn that this is not an irreversible process, and the risk of re-identifying individuals is both real and underestimated.

Government’s Misuse and Abuse of Citizens’ Privacy

Many Americans do not realize that the United States is one of the few advanced economies without a federal data protection agency. If the current administration continues on its path of eroding citizen privacy, the scant statutory protections the U.S. does have may prove meaningless.

The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) of 1970 was enacted to protect consumers from government overreach into personal identifiable data, and has been promoted as the primary consumer privacy protection. However, in 2023, attorney and internet privacy advocate Lauren Harriman warned how data brokers circumvent the FCRA, for instance, “pay[ing] handsome sums to your utility company for your name and address.” Data brokers then repackage those names and addresses with other data, without conducting any type of accuracy analysis on the newly formed dataset, before then selling that new dataset to the highest third-party bidder.

Invasion of the Data Snatchers

Though the “gut-the-government bromance” between the president and Elon Musk appears to be on the rocks just six months into Trump 2.0, the Department of Government Efficiency’s unfettered access to data is concerning, especially after the June 6, 2025 Supreme Court ruling that gave the Musk-led DOGE complete access to confidential Social Security information, irrespective of the privacy rights once upheld by the Social Security Act of 1935. The act prohibits the disclosure of any tax return in whole or in part by officers or employees of the Social Security Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services.

Nevertheless, DOGE has commandeered the Social Security Administration (SSA) and Department of Health and Human Services systems and those of at least 15 other federal agencies containing Americans’ personal identifiable information without disclosing “what data has been accessed, who has that access, how it will be used or transferred, or what safeguards are in place for its use.”

Since DOGE infiltrated the Social Security Administration, the agency’s website has crashed numerous times, creating interruptions for beneficiaries. In June, Senators Elizabeth Warren and Ron Wyden issued a letter to the SSA’s commissioner, detailing their concerns about DOGE’s use of PII. Warren told Wired that “DOGE staffers hacking away Social Security’s backend tech with no safeguards is a recipe for disaster … [and] risks people’s private data, creates security gaps and could result in catastrophic cuts to all benefits.”

Likewise, the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 (updated in 1986) was enacted to ensure data protection, prohibiting—with rare exceptions—the release of taxpayer information by Internal Revenue Service employees. According to the national legal organization Democracy Forward, “Changes to IRS data practices—at the behest of DOGE—throw into question those assurances and the confidentiality of data held by the government collected from hundreds of millions of Americans.”

Equally troubling is that Opexus, a private equity-owned federal contractor, maintains the IRS database. Worse still is that two Opexus employees—twin brothers and skilled hackers with prison records for stealing and selling PII on the dark web—Suhaib and Muneeb Akhter, had access to the IRS data, as well as to that of the Department of Energy, Defense Department and the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General.

In February 2025, approximately one year into their Opexus employment, the twins were summoned to a virtual meeting with human resources and fired. During that meeting, Muneeb Akhter, who still had clearance to use the servers, accessed an IRS database from his company-issued laptop and blocked others from connecting to it. While still in the meeting, Akhter deleted 33 other databases, and about an hour later, “inserted a USB drive into his laptop and removed 1,805 files of data related to a ‘custom project’ for a government agency,” causing service disruptions.

That investigations by the FBI and other federal law enforcement agencies are underway does little to quell concerns about the insecurity of personal identifiable information and sensitive national security data. And although the Privacy Act of 1974, the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986 were all established to protect PII, the June Supreme Court ruling granting DOGE carte blanche data access dashes all confidence that laws will be upheld.

Americans Don’t Know What They Don’t Know

Perhaps most disconcerting in this whole scenario is that too few citizens realize just how far their online footprints travel and how vulnerable their private information actually is. According to internet culture reporter Kate Lindsay, citizen ignorance comes not only from a lack of reporting on how tech elites pull government strings to their own advantage, but also from fewer corporate news outlets covering people living with the consequences of those power moves. Internet culture and tech, once intertwined topics for the establishment press, are now more separately focused on either AI or the Big Tech power players, but not on holding them to account.

The Tech Policy Press argues that the government’s self-proclaimed need for expediency and efficiency cannot justify flouting data privacy policies and laws, and that the corporate media is largely failing their audiences by not publicizing the specifics of how the government and its corporate tech partners are obliterating citizens’ privacy rights. “To make matters worse, Congress has been asleep at the switch while the federal government has expanded the security state and private companies have run amok in storing and selling our data,” stated the senator from Silicon Valley, Ro Khanna.

A 2023 Pew Research Center survey of Americans’ views on data privacy found that approximately six in 10 Americans do not bother to read website and application policies. When online, most users click “agree” without reading the relevant terms and conditions they accept by doing so. 

According to the survey, Americans of all political stripes are equally distrustful of government and corporations when it comes to how third parties use their PII. Respondents with some higher education reported taking more online privacy precautions than those who never attended college. The latter reported a stronger belief that government and corporations would “do the right thing” with their data. The least knowledgeable respondents were also the least skeptical, pointing to an urgent need for critical information literacy and digital hygiene skills.

Exploitation of Personal Identifiable Information

After Musk’s call to “delete” the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), approximately 1,400 staff members were fired in April, emptying out the agency that was once capable of policing Wall Street and Big Tech. Now, with the combined forces of government and Big Tech, and their sharing of database resources, the government can conduct intrusive surveillance on almost anyone, without court oversight or public debate. The Project on Government Oversight has argued that the U.S. Constitution was meant to protect the population from authoritarian-style government monitoring, warning that these maneuvers are incompatible with a free society.

On May 15, 2025, the CFPB, against the better judgment of the ​​Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and the wider public, quietly withdrew a rule, proposed in 2024, that would have imposed limits on U.S.-based data brokers who buy and sell Americans’ private information. Had the rule been enacted, it would have expanded the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) data protections for citizens. 

However, in February, Russell Vought, the self-professed white nationalist and Trump 2.0 acting director of the Office of Management and Budget and the CFPB, demanded its withdrawal, alleging the ruling would have infringed on financial institutions’ capabilities to detect and prevent fraud. Vought also instructed employees to cease all public communications, pending investigations, and proposed or previously implemented rules, including the proposal titled “Protecting Americans from Harmful Data Broker Practices.”

The now-gutted CFPB lacks both the resources and authority needed to police the widespread exploitation of consumers’ personal information, says the Electronic Privacy Information Center, the privacy rights advocacy agency.

Double Standards for Data Privacy

Although the government’s collection of PII has always been a double-edged sword, with Big Tech on the side of Trump 2.0, data surveillance of law-abiding citizens has soared to worrying heights. Across every presidency since 9/11, government surveillance has become increasingly more extensive and elaborate. Moreover, Big Tech is all too willing to pledge allegiance to whichever party happens to be in power. 

According to investigative journalist Dell Cameron, the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, Defense Counterintelligence and Security Agency, and Customs and Border Protection are among the largest “federal agencies known to purchase Americans’ private data, including that which law enforcement agencies would normally require probable cause to obtain.”

Meanwhile, it’s a Big Tech and data broker free-for-all. DOGE’s and the feds’ activities are shrouded in secrecy, often facilitated by the Big Tech lobbying money that seeks to replace legitimate privacy laws with “fake industry alternatives.” Banks, credit agencies and tech companies must adhere to consumer privacy laws. “Yet DOGE has been granted sweeping access across federal agencies—with no equivalent restrictions,” said business reporter Susie Stulz.

Knowing One’s Risks

Interpol has warned that scams known as “pig butchering” and “business email compromise” and those used for human trafficking are on the rise due to an increase in the use of new technologies, including apps, AI deepfakes and cryptocurrencies. Hacking agents, humans and bots are becoming more sophisticated, while any semblance of data privacy guardrails for citizens has been removed.

Individual choices matter. At minimum, when using technology, one should consider if a website or app’s services are so badly needed or wanted that they are willing to give up their personal identifiable information. Standard advice to delete and block phishing and spam emails and texts remains apropos, but only scratches the surface of online protection.

Privacy advocates assert that DOGE’s access to personal identifiable information escalates the risk of exposure to hackers and foreign adversaries as well as to widespread domestic surveillance. Trump’s latest contract with tech giant Palantir to create a national database of Americans’ private information raises a big red flag for civil rights organizations, “that this could be the precursor to surveillance of Americans on a mass scale.” 

Palantir’s involvement in government portends to be the last step “in transforming America from a constitutional republic into a digital dictatorship armed with algorithms and powered by unaccountable, all-seeing artificial intelligence,” wrote constitutional law and human rights attorney John W. Whitehead.

A longtime J.D. Vance financial backer, Palantir’s Peter Thiel, the South African, white nationalist billionaire and right-wing donor, is credited with catapulting Vance’s political career. Unsurprisingly, the Free Thought Project reported that since Trump’s return to The White House, “Palantir has racked up over $100 million in government contracts, and is slated to strike a nearly $800 million deal with the Pentagon.” Palantir, incidentally, is also contracted with the Israeli government, as is Google.

Knowing One’s Rights

The right to privacy is enshrined in Article 12 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states, “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or correspondence, nor to attacks upon his honor and reputation. Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.” Article 17 of the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights asserts the same, and in 1992, the United States ratified the treaty, thereby consenting to its binding terms.

But is privacy actually a protected civil right in the United States? According to legal scholars Anita Allen and Christopher Muhawe, the history of U.S. civil rights law shows limited support for conceptualizing privacy and data protection as a civil right. Nonetheless, civil rights law is a dynamic moral, political and legal concept. And if privacy is interpreted as a civil right, privacy protection becomes a fundamental requirement of justice and good government.

Protection from surveillance needs to be top-down through legal and policy limits on data collection, and bottom-up by putting technological control of personal data into the hands of consumers, i.e., the targets of surveillance.

As long as the public is uninformed and the corporate press remains all but silent, the more likely it is that these unconstitutional practices will not only continue but will become normalized. Until the United States is actually governed by and for the people, we the people can start practicing surveillance self-defense now.

Although constitutional lawyers are typically considered the first responders to assaults on the Constitution and privacy rights, a constellation of efforts over time is required to, as much as possible, keep private data private.

Ultimately, though, the safeguarding of data cannot be left to the government or corporations, or even the lawyers. For that reason, the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s tips and tools for customizing individualized digital security plans are made available to everyone. By implementing such plans and possessing strong critical media and digital literacy skills, civil society will be better informed and more empowered in the defense of privacy rights.

Mischa Geracoulis is the managing editor at Project Censored​ (which originated this story) and The Censored Press, contributor to Project Censored’s State of the Free Press yearbook series, Project Judge, and author of Media Framing and the Destruction of Cultural Heritage (2025)​.

Twerk Plus, ‘House of Flow’

So it is that one doesn’t choose their fame … their fame chooses them. 

And so it was that when the name Tristan St. Germain first reached me, it was in the aspect of the neon clad “twerk queen of the North Bay.” The twerk, for those who don’t know, is a hip-hop derived, booty-forward dance style. It’s strong and it polarizes opinion. It has been called both “the final evolution” and “the final devolution” of 20th century dance styles, and it is found everywhere in the clubs. 

And if one lives in the North Bay and dials “twerk” into their Instagram discovery page, chances are they will pull up a viral video of St. Germain leading a big class of “twerkers” at some earthy rave-y music festival (try @tristan_st.germain for a shortcut).  

These classes are fierce and even intimating scenes of (mostly) women backing it forward in martial line. What detractors sometimes miss is that the twerk is about liberating female power. 

Given the fame attached to her name, I was surprised to enter St. Germain’s new dance studio, The House of Flow, and read the schedule of classes she had posted. “Twerk Out” was just one of 10 or 12 of the weekly classes offered by her and two other regular teachers, along with group circuit training, Vinyasa yoga, Buti Movement (high energy yoga and cardio), “Free Your Dance Style,” teacher trainings, master classes, belly dancing, MMA (mixed martial arts) and group fitness with her husband, Matt. 

Taking that weekly schedule of classes as a mosaic portrait of the professional woman, “Twerk” represents only one small tile in her composite image. If there is a word to group her many styles and approach to teaching movement, it would be her own—“movement medicine.” 

Cincinnatus Hibbard: Tristan, tell me about The Healing Sanctuary, the second business inside your House of Flow studio. 

Tristan St. Germain: Yes. I am a trauma-informed somatic transformational life coach. And I like to give homage to my teachers. I was trained in “Compassion Inquiry” by Dr. Gabor Mate. I also studied “Internal Family Systems” under Dick Schwartz and “Holistic Health and Wellness Coaching” through The National Academy of Sports Medicine. With The Healing Sanctuary, I have come to specialize in addiction and psychedelic plant medicine preparation and integration. I do that work here and with people all over the world, remotely. 

Tell me about Twerk and Twerk Outs as movement medicine and trauma-informed somatic therapy. 

We tend to hold so much tension in our hips … and with that shame, oppression and sexual trauma. I try to facilitate safe spaces where you can really shake your hips open and shake that stagnant energy out. It is sensual, but it’s more than that … our hips are the center of our being. 

Learn more: Go to houseofflowsr.com and on instagram @house_of_flow.sr. 

Kitchen Collab, Lodge at Marconi’s Chef Les Goodman

It would be hard to find any similarities between West Marin County and Las Vegas. But for chef Les Goodman, a culinary career spanning 25 years is the connecting point from his hometown of Las Vegas to Marshall, leading up the kitchen at Lodge at Marconi’s brand new restaurant, Mable’s. 

Goodman has a passion for exploring different cultures and cuisines from across the globe, as well as imparting his knowledge with others through a collaborative approach with his staff. He also serves as associate faculty chef instructor at Santa Rosa Junior College, teaching the next generation about global influences in modern cuisine. 

Having settled in Sonoma County more than 15 years ago, he previously served as executive chef and CEO of Goodman’s Jewish Delicatessen in that same county. Outside the kitchen, he enjoys family time, traveling, outdoor exploration and gardening.

Amber Turpin: What is your job?

Les Goodman: Executive chef at Mable’s at Lodge at Marconi

How did you get into this work?

My mother would tell you that I started as a toddler trying to make myself some eggs. I had the pan on the stove, eggs in the pan, but didn’t know how to turn the burner on, thankfully. 

I grew up watching a lot of PBS cooking shows in the ’80s and early ’90s. Then in 8th grade I had a choice between doing a science project and a mentor program. I chose the mentor program and was able to secure a stint with Andre Rochat back home in Las Vegas. I had to work a full dinner service on a Saturday night and never looked back.

Did you ever have an ‘aha’ moment with a certain beverage? If so, tell us about it.

That’s a hard one. There have been some new types and styles of wines that I have been introduced to that I love, like a delicious assyrtiko from Greece or the newest varietal being a picpoul, which some wineries are moving towards because of its sustainability aspect of not needing as much water as most grapes.

What is your favorite thing to drink at home?

Wine with dinner. But at the end of the night, I stick with whisky, scotch, rye or bourbon.

Where do you like to go out for a drink?

I don’t go out to drink that often, but Lo and Behold in Healdsburg or Fern Bar in Sebastopol have some great drinks.

If you were stuck on a desert island, what would you want to be drinking (besides fresh water)?

It’s an island, so something refreshing: a mojito or caipirinha-style drink.

Mable’s at Lodge at Marconi, 18500 Hwy. 1, Marshall, 415.663.9020. mablesrestaurant.com.

Free Will Astrology: 7/9-7/15

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ARIES (March 21-April 19): In the days before lighthouses, some coastal communities used “fire beacons”—elevated structures where people tended open flames to guide sailors. In the coming weeks, Aries, I invite you to be like both the keeper and the flame. People will be drawn to your brightness, warmth and persistence as they navigate through their haze and fog. And surprise. You may find your own way more clearly as you tend to others’ wayfinding. Don’t underestimate the value of your steady, luminous signal. For some travelers, your presence could be the difference between drifting and docking. So burn with purpose, please. Keep your gleam strong and visible.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The ancestors of my American friend, Arisa, lived in Ukraine, Indonesia, the Choctaw nation and the Great Lakes region. Her new husband, Anselme, is of Japanese, Italian and French descent. Their wedding was a celebration of multi-cultural influences. Guests delivered toasts in five languages. Their marriage vows borrowed texts from three religious traditions. The music included a gamelan ensemble, a band that played Ukrainian folk music and a DJ spinning Choctaw and Navajo prayers set to Indian ragas. I bring this to your attention in the hope you will seek comparable cross-fertilization in the coming weeks. It’s an excellent time to weave richly diverse textures into your life.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): I predict a future when women will hold half of the leadership roles, when their income and time devoted to childcare will match men’s, when women’s orgasms are as common as men’s and when most guys know that misogyny is perilous to their health. Until the bloom of that wonderful era, I invite Geminis of all genders to invoke your tender ingenuity as you strengthen female opportunities and power. In my view, this work is always crucial to your maximum spiritual and psychological health—but even more so than usual in the coming weeks. Boost the feminine in every way you can imagine.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): In Yoruba cosmology, ase is the sacred life force that animates the universe. It’s divine energy that can be harnessed by humans to make things happen, to speak and act with ardent intention so that words and deeds shape reality. I am pleased to report that you Cancerians are extra aligned with ase these days. Your words are not casual. Your actions are not mild or minor. You have the power to speak what you mean so robustly that it has an enhanced possibility to come into being. What you command with love and clarity will carry enduring potency.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In medieval bestiaries, unicorns were said to be fierce, wild creatures. They were very real but also hidden. Only people with pure hearts could see or commune with them. I suspect you now have the chance to glide into a potent “pure heart” phase, Leo. My fervent hope is that you will take this opportunity to cleanse yourself of irrelevancies and rededicate yourself to your deepest yearnings and most authentic self-expressions. If you do, you just may encounter the equivalent of a unicorn.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Some Buddhist monks create mandalas on floors from colored sand. They work meticulously for days or weeks to build intricate, symmetrical masterpieces. Once their beautiful work is done, however, it typically doesn’t last long. The creators sweep it away either immediately or soon. The sand may be disposed of, perhaps poured into a river or stream. What’s the purpose of this strange practice? Most importantly, it displays a reverence for the impermanence of all things—an appreciation for beauty but not an attachment to it.  I recommend you consider taking a cue from the sand mandalas in the coming weeks. Is there anything you love that you should let go of? A creation you can allow to transform into a new shape? An act of sacred relinquishing? 

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Glassblowers shape molten sand with breath and fire, knowing the material can only be formed while it’s hot and glowing. If they wait too long, the stuff stiffens, turns brittle and resists change. But if they push too soon, it collapses into a misshapen blob. In this spirit, Libra, I urge you to recognize which parts of your life are now just the right temperature to be reshaped. Your timing must be impeccable. Where and when will you direct the flame of your willpower? Don’t wait until the opportunity cools. Art and magic will happen with just the right amount of heat applied at just the right moment.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): “I have often been racked by obsessive urges that plague me until I act them out.” So says my Scorpio friend, Fatima, a conceptual artist. “Fortunately,” she continues, “I have finally retrained myself to focus on creative obsessions that fuel my art rather than on anxious, trivial obsessions that disorder my life. I’d be an offensive maniac if I couldn’t use my work as an outlet for my vehement fantasy life.” I recommend Fatima’s strategy to Scorpios most of the time, but especially so in the coming days. Your imagination is even more cornucopian than usual. To harness its beautiful but unruly power, you must channel it into noble goals.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The Igbo people of Nigeria have a term: ogwugwu na-adị n’ulo. It means “the medicine is in the house.” It’s the belief that healing doesn’t necessarily come from afar. It may already be here, hidden among the familiar, waiting to be acknowledged or discovered. Dear Sagittarius, your natural instinct is to look outward and afar for answers and help. But in the coming weeks, you should look close to home. What unnoticed or underestimated thing might be a cure or inspiration you’ve been overlooking? How can you find new uses for what you already have?

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I invite you to celebrate the holiday known as Be Your Own Best Helper. How should you observe this potentially pivotal transformation in your relationship with yourself? Divest yourself of yearnings to have someone clean up after you and service your baseline necessities. Renounce any wishes you harbor for some special person to telepathically guess and attend to your every need. Vow that from now on, you will be an expert at taking excellent care of yourself. Do you dare to imagine what it might feel like to be your own best helper?

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): In the ancient practice of astronomy, the stars were considered “incorruptible.” Unlike the planets, their movements were unchanging, their lights stationary, their destinies steady and stable. We human beings are the opposite of all those descriptors, of course. There’s no use in hoping otherwise, because constancy just isn’t an option for us. The good news, Aquarius, is that you are now poised to thrive on these truths. The inevitability of change can and should be a treasured gift for you. You’re being offered chances to revise plans that do indeed need to be revised. You are being invited to let go of roles that don’t serve you. But what initially feels like a loss or sacrifice may actually be permission. Evolution is a tremendous privilege.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): The axolotl is an amphibian that never outgrows its larval form. Unlike most creatures, it retains its youthful traits into adulthood. Amazingly, it can regenerate its limbs, its spinal cord and parts of its brain. Let’s make the axolotl your inspirational animal, Pisces. What part of your “youth” is worth keeping—not as immaturity, but as righteous design? Where are you being asked not to evolve past a stage, but to deepen within it? And what might be regenerated in you that seemed to have been lost? Your magic will come from being like an axolotl. Be strange. Be playful. Be ageless and original and irrepressible.

Your Letters, July 9

Free Range 

As we celebrated the Fourth of July, did we pause to consider the basic freedoms of animals? Whether hunted in the wild; confined in laboratories; imprisoned in zoos or circuses; caught in traps; or caged, raised and killed for their fur, skin, feathers, flesh or by-products, animals have no freedom.

Consider farmed animals: billions live in confinement, deprived of autonomy, dignity and joy. Chickens never spread their wings, pigs never root in the soil and cows never feel the sun on their bodies. They’re bred solely for exploitation—caged, mutilated and killed, with no say in their fate.

If freedom is a value we truly cherish, shouldn’t it extend beyond our own species? Choosing a plant-based lifestyle is one powerful way to put our values into action. If the roles were reversed, wouldn’t we want the same?

Steven Alderson
Santa Rosa

Symbol Crash

America was born under the sign of Cancer (“Horoscope for America,” July 2)? It is certainly infected with cancers of misinformation, voter apathy and partisan rancor. But the solution to cancer is remarkably simple, as proven by the effectiveness of pink ribbons saving millions of women’s lives by spreading awareness. 

We need a symbol to show support for the ideals that we strive for with a more perfect union. 

Symbols are powerful—a swastika can be a hate crime and a cross can show love, compassion, justice and caring for the marginalized. A Star Spangled Möbius Strip, visually “Stars and Stripes Forever,” can be worn anywhere to show support for the continuation of our democratic experiment and can encourage neighbors and coworkers to participate in our elections. Download a printable pdf for free at democracyawareness.org

John Rose
Santa Rosa

Culture Crush, 7/9

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Sonoma

Come to My Living Room

Artist and vintner Alice Warnecke Sutro invites viewers into an intimate world with Come to My Living Room, a solo exhibition of multimedia figurative drawings on view July 11-20 at Alley Gallery in Sonoma. Known for live large-scale works, Sutro offers a rare glimpse at quieter, layered pieces drawn from private drawing sessions in her home—where pencil, etching and digital overlays trace moments of gesture and memory. An opening reception will be held 5-7pm, Friday, July 11, with wine and light refreshments. 11am-4pm, Thursdays-Sundays, July 11-20, at Alley Gallery, 148 E. Napa St., Sonoma. Opening reception RSVP at comeintomylivingroomopening.eventbrite.com.

Cotati

SF Mime Troupe’s ‘Disruption’

The San Francisco Mime Troupe’s latest, Disruption – A Musical Farce, lands in Cotati on Sunday, July 27, delivering a sharp, funny and fiery take on tech, politics and resistance in a rapidly changing San Francisco. Set in a city on the brink of becoming a corporate suburb, the show asks what happens when progress burns a little too hot. The free performance begins at 3pm (live music at 2:30) in La Plaza Park. Presented by the San Francisco Mime Troupe, the 80-minute satire is fast-paced, irreverent and very much of the moment. 3pm, Sunday, July 27, at La Plaza Park, Old Redwood Hwy. & W. Sierra Ave., Cotati. Free; $20 suggested donation. Full schedule at sfmt.org.

Novato

Cemetery Tours

The Novato Historical Guild resumes its Pioneer Park Cemetery Tours, offering guided deep dives into the stories of early Novato residents. Led by docent Sharon Azevedo, the 90-minute walks uncover rich local history among the headstones. Upcoming tours begin at 9am on July 26, Aug. 16 and Sept. 20. Reservations are required, with a suggested $10 donation onsite. 9am, Saturdays: July 26, Aug. 16 and Sept. 20. Pioneer Park Cemetery, Novato. Register at novatohistory.org under ‘Events.

Mill Valley

Modern Age Muse

Poet and the Bench presents Muse for the Modern Age, the first U.S. exhibition of Tokyo-based sculptor Hideki Iinuma, on view through July 11. Known for his commanding wooden figures carved using traditional ichiboku-zukuri techniques, Iinuma’s work explores identity, independence and feminine presence with a fashion-forward edge. The free exhibition showcases Iinuma’s vividly painted, intricately adorned sculptures—celebrating form, spirit and craftsmanship at a striking new scale. 10:30am-5pm, Tuesday-Friday, through September, at Poet and the Bench, 11 Throckmorton Ave., Mill Valley. Details at poetandthebench.com.

’Murica Go Boom, Marin’s Firework Gawk Spots

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Happy Fourth of July, Marin. Or, in other words, “Screeeeeeee boom bang snap, crackle and pop (plus a low ’n slow slide whistle into deafening silence and probable lingering tinnitus)” to all those locals who plan to celebrate this all-American holiday the traditional way—with pyrotechnics, naturally.

But before everyone goes all Katy Perry’s Firework on the North Bay and really lets those colors burst, it may be worth it to take a moment to reflect on this holiday, its origin and the original meaning behind all those bright, sparkly lights in the sky.

The first ever Fourth of July, aka Independence Day, was celebrated nearly 250 years ago on July 4, 1776, when the 13 American colonies broke free from the British monarchy through the American Revolution and the creation of the famous Declaration of Independence.

The purpose of this document, for those unlikely few who don’t know, was to free the American people from the tyranny of corrupt politicians, oppressive governments and overreaching monarchical or oligarchical rulership. In other words, Independence Day marked the Founding Fathers’ own #NoKings movement—it was in that spirit that the historical inception of the United States took place.

John Adams, one of the Founding Fathers and America’s second president, wrote a rather predictive letter that set the precedent and/or prognosticated the way people would celebrate Independence Day (which was originally supposed to be July 2, but became July 4 due to a two-day delay (bureaucracy, amirite?)):

“The Second Day of July 1776, will be the most memorable Epocha, in the History of America. I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated, by succeeding Generations, as the great anniversary Festival. It ought to be commemorated, as the Day of Deliverance by Solemn Acts of Devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be Solemnized with Pomp and Parade with Shows, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires and Illuminations from one End of this Continent to the other from this Time forward forever more.”

Pomp, parade, shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires and illuminations (also known as fireworks) sound just about right. The only part Adams didn’t get right was the date and the decline in the popularity of bells, though maybe they’ll make a comeback. Either way, it’s safe to say that much has changed in this country since that first Fourth of July. But one thing that has never wavered is the people’s dedication to celebrating the occasion with explosives. 

Whether those be the rockets’ red glare or the bombs bursting in air, they all give proof through the night that our flag is still there. Yup, that star spangled banner yet waves o’er the land of the free and the home of the brave … in theory, at least.

History aside, it’s time to look more closely at modern America’s Marin County—and, more specifically, delve into the options for those looking to take in some patriotic shows.

First up is the beloved, ever-classic Marin County Fair, which will host its traditional fireworks show over the lagoon every night it is open. That means all of Marin can come out and see/hear the authentic fireworks experience from President Adams’ predicted date of July 2 all the way through to July 6. Plus, the fair holds all the best historical traditions made modern: plenty of pomp, shows, games and illuminations to go around … but bonfires and other unmentioned elements from Adams’ list shall not be a part of the family-friendly fair. Which, to be fair, is a good sign of America’s progress in the past 250 years.

Another spot for local fireworks in Marin is McInnis Park in San Rafael, which is known as a great place to view the county fair fireworks from afar (and to possibly get up close and patriotic with some s’mores, too). Nothing says independence from oppressive rule quite like sweet treats, explosives and a community sharing company and good vibes together in a park.

To view the San Francisco fireworks show without having to cross the Golden Gate Bridge, the Marin Headlands are the place to be. More specifically, Hawk Hill and the Moor Road Pier in Sausalito should give a pretty good show. Tiburon also has a few spots for spotting some of San Francisco’s firework shows, including Tiburon Historic Trail (aka Blackie’s Pasture). Plus, the Angel Island and Tiburon ferry offers some less landlocked viewing options a la cruise, for those who prefer to take in their fireworks on the open seas.

Whether ye be a land lover or prone to answering the call of the vast ocean deep, do keep in mind that these firework gawking spots are only as good as the sky is clear. In other words, people can only go out and expect to see the city lit up in intentional, aesthetic explosions if the (in)famous fog, Karl, keeps a low profile. Guess only time will tell how patriotic Karl is feeling this year … maybe Karl and clear skies on the Fourth of July is similar to Punxsutawney Phil and Groundhog Day. Someone should look into it.

Alongside lighting off some fireworks, gathering together ’round tailgates to BBQ and adorning oneself in properly patriotic star-spangled bikinis and Speedos, how else can one possibly commemorate such a momentous occasion as this, the holiday marking this great country’s very beginning? Perhaps, before digging into those all-American beers, burgers and boom boom sticks, one could take a moment to read some of the first lines written in the Declaration of Independence.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,—That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”

Happy Independence Day to the North Bay—may the holiday be truly illuminating. And may all the dogs, cats and otherwise firework-sensitive folks out there find safe, silent places to seclude themselves away from all the commotion of the countrywide celebratory tradition of setting off a veritable plethora of explosives.

An American Horoscope, Born on the 4th of July Means Cancer

A Birthday, But No Party

On July 4, America will celebrate her 249th birthday. Ah, but in sooth, what American—left, right or center, is in a mood to celebrate our political union?

America, our collective body-politic, is sick—the union is weak, and some say in fatal decline. On her worst days, some doubt whether America will live to be 250. We seek guidance, but our experts give us no comfort as to the remedy. Some urge slimming systems, others fat largesse.

With numeric indicators and trends flipping up and down daily, in a month of days, economists and news pundits will point a hundred contradicting arrows into the far field of America’s futurity. 

The “experts” only ramify our inexpert confusion and moodiness. Some months ago, crumpling The Wall Street Journal in disgust, I had a sudden inspiration—if  doctors and physicians have failed the patient, it’s time to call a metaphysician. I would call in an astrologer to give America’s prognosis and cure, and predict the line of our uncertain future. They would gift us a horoscope for America on her birthday.

America Is a Cancer

Was I being silly? I thought to test my idea with some light research. If America was born in Philly on July 4, America would be a Cancer. That is to say, the sign of Cancer would be America’s formative and guiding “sun sign.”

According to cosmopolitan.com, crab-like “Cancers” such as America are centered on home life and very protective of their homes, nurturing of their families, loyal, visionary, highly emotional and given to mood swings.

I have to say, fellow skeptics, all that tracks—those are America’s core characteristics. Putting The Wall Street Journal down, I had a sudden flash of the nations of the world—their compatibilities and incompatibilities determined by their astrological signs. What sign is China? Somebody find out. I was encouraged. In the business of mysticism, this would be called a “confirming sign” that I was headed up the right path. Now, I just had to find the right astrologer…

Enter Coco, the Astrologer

Fortunately, I knew a magic man. Named Coco Siles, he was open to my new idea. Eagerly, I asked him my questions—the questions that are on every American’s mind:

• America is concerned about an economic depression. Like an emotional depression, it’s caused by a loss of confidence, lack of direction, internal conflict, fear and sadness. Will America have a depression?

• Will America’s inner conflict get even worse? Do the stars give any guidance to Cancers about achieving greater inner harmony?

• America fears external conflict, too. America is losing friends, feeling isolated. There

has been a lot of shouting and ill will with its enemies. Will there be war?

• Will America ever find love in the world?

• When and how will America die? It is a taboo to ask them, but I understand astrologers have some foresight of how we will die.

As we parted, I was struck with the rightness of choosing Coco Siles for this, this year. Because Coco is an immigrant to this country. He is brown, he is fem, he is gay, he is spiritual rather than religious and some would say a “pagan,” being that he’s an astrologer. Essentially Coco is everything that those on the far right would say is “foreign” to America. But as a loyal, hardworking homebody, Coco has the true essential characteristics of an American—the characteristics of a Cancer.

SIGN Our correspondent asked ‘magic man’ Coco Siles to create a horoscope for America, which is a Cancer. Photo by Sarah Deragon.

And, as to being brown and gay, Coco is in truth everything that is missing from the true conception of America and its political center. It is right that he should be at the center of this paper’s cover story on the Fourth of July. Being his dialectical “opposite”—white and straight, for starters—it is right that I should make room for him. This is not a protest piece. This is healing. This article, then, is a sign and expression of two Americas working together to create a more perfect union. It’s another confirming sign on this path.

The astrologer took my questions and went away. Engaging “The Mystery,” his is a mysterious  business. All I know about his process is that Coco spends many hours cleansing himself physically and energetically to receive—becoming a cosmic antenna and a clear channel. These, listed here, are his received answers. They answer some of my questions and ignore others. They answer questions that were unsaid. But this is to be expected. Classically, the oracle is delphic.

Coco Siles presents his “America’s Horoscope” in three parts, corresponding to the “big three” signs in our astrological charts. In reading this horoscope, he invites us all to consider this as guidance for America collectively and as guidance for each American individually.

America’s Horoscope

By Coco Siles

On July 4, 1776, a miracle happened, America—you were born with a lot of things happening at the same time. The moment your mother expelled you from her womb, your cells absorbed different energies. Energies from all the natural movements happening around you: water, earth, fire, air. A miracle was taking place in the Universe. The Sun was in the constellation of Cancer, the Moon in the constellation of Aquarius and your rising was in Sagittarius. The message that the guides have prepared for you is the following:

We are experiencing a rite of passage. The ritual of a consciousness moving into another state. A new level of re-cognition, a congregation of soulmates who come together into a comfortable space where we have everything we need and, above all, the company to begin a new life. Our spirits are re-connecting to guide us where we feel into our favorite pace.

Astrology is a sacred language that requires patience, commitment and respect. Re-connecting with The Source is fundamental. The body is the voice of the soul, and when both interact the spirit/Source fulfills its function. Our impact, role and responsibility is to provide the information required to update our immune system and recalibrate ourselves in a new state of consciousness, and thus empower our marginalized identities.

America’s Sun Sign Is Cancer

Your Sun, Cancer, is blessed. Let’s pretend that all your cells are cells of this Sign, all working in harmony and in unison with the melody sung by your Mother. They are so powerful that they have the ability to move the entire body, guide it and protect it above all else. But such power can create rebellion in just one cell. And when a cell rebels, it creates its own state. It becomes controlling and manipulative. That cell believes it owns the entire body. The other cells that function in harmony don’t understand what’s happening. The rebellious cell has become a disease.

Your Sun/Cancer is the state of consciousness ruled by the Moon/High emotional sensitivity (evoking home/family/work). “Home,” internal and external, is a source of energy for you (this is a challenge/virtue/self-knowledge). Your light is so bright that it has the energy/power of guidance and control (this is a challenge/virtue).

America, you can be reserved in personal matters. You can be very selective in your intimate environment. Learn to discern who to be with and who not to, to form a partnership/work/partner with. Listening to the body/the voice of the soul. Feeling is the key. Reasoning, thinking and behavior depend on your mood (grounding/feet on the ground/earth). 

You have the tendency to attract people with strong personalities. Your companions/partners will be your greatest support—if they don’t accompany you, you should let them go. The element of water is your greatest source of inspiration (visits to the sea/water-related practices). Family/home is a fundamental part of your spiritual development.

Moon Sign = Aquarius

America, you will seek emotions of liberation (where they aren’t told what to do). You will rebel without a cause (a challenge you will confront ). Because of this, your relationship with your emotions may become complicated (challenge/self-knowledge). So you must engage in self-knowledge exercises (journaling/writing and grounding your feet on the ground/earth).

You will seek a partner, to accompany them through their emotional processes (companionship/allyship). Constant changes in your emotions are a process of internal transformation (a challenge for you). You wish to free yourself from negative emotions such as fear, anger and jealousy. This liberation is achieved through therapy or ongoing self-knowledge exercises (practice). You must free yourself from the many expectations of others (others are a reflection of yourself). Expectations are desires/illusions that block the advancement of true emotions (challenge). This year, no more expectations.

Rising Sign = Sagittarius 

When you woke up, you were given a suitcase with a map, with all the things you needed to go through this new life process. Your nature/way of being is directed toward noble goals (home/family/work). You are here to learn how to articulate your earthly and animal instincts/reactions (your challenge). You might be constantly striving for something that is very difficult to achieve in this life (a challenge).

Lower your expectations and observe situations as they are, natural. Your life philosophy should be, “Things happen for a reason.” Don’t try to force anything or anyone.

America, you are full of passion for what you set out to do (home/family/work). You need to use/harness the energy of your passions and enthusiasm (challenge). You shouldn’t boast about your virtues (a challenge). You have the potential to become a very inspirational person in your community.

Closing the Circle

Don’t forget that a country has a collective psyche that reacts to the movements of its environment: water, earth, fire, air—the entire Universe. Movements that awaken us to discomfort. Between 2025/2026/2027, we will experience the beginning of the process of collapse of the old model/system, the old social, economic, political and power paradigm in general. A confrontation with a past that will never return. A country that begins an internal journey in search of its soul, in search of its deepest essence, which can only be achieved by descending into the deepest core of its being.

The return of the planets in our astrological chart confronts us with a reality with a very powerful charge that depends on the collective psyche to accept or reject what is happening. Compulsive consumerism collapses/transforms this. The shortcomings of the social system are clearly visible. If we don’t want a part of history to repeat itself, we must have the ability to recall any information that helps us recover as multidimensional beings living a human life, and co-create a new history. Love, above all.

Happy Birthday, America

I will not attempt to bias your interpretation of Coco’s received words. Your interpretation is correct to/for you. But I will comment upon the lightness of Coco when he channels. It is not the light of the sun and the stars. It is the ultimate light of “The Source.” And seeing that loving light shine through his received words makes me feel hopeful. Whatever comes will be all right because that light guides us.

Keep the faith. Happy birthday, America. Two hundred and forty-nine years old, but still a moody teenager in the life of nations. We love you. Because you are we. — Cincinnatus Hibbard

Learn more: Go to linktr.ee/americaastroLINKS to learn more about Coco Siles, astrology and Cincinnatus Hibbard.

Your Letters, July 2

Higher Yearning

Readers are no doubt hyper focused on the government’s “totally politically neutral” attacks on institutions of higher learning, such as Harvard. The universities say that the government’s attempt to impose ideological conditions on federally funded research “violates the Constitution and would corrupt the integrity of academic institutions.”

Further, by cutting federal funding essential to sustaining a robust university research environment at Harvard and elsewhere, the administration is depleting the next generation of scientific talent. 

I am a product of one of the institutions of higher learning that is under attack. It was there I learned to doubt, distrust, disbelieve, reject and minimize any initiative taken by any large organization, especially “democratic institutions” such as the United States government and Harvard University.

It was there I learned that governments lie, that large organizations pursue no valid interests outside their own and that the only reason that companies such as Chevron, Monsanto and Archer Daniels Midland exist is plunder. There is no dispute here.

We live in a country with no meaningful values, from an institutional perspective or any other, if we ever did. None.

And may I add that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is an active buffoon, and not one of Trump’s golf courses is worth a sh**.

Craig J. Corsini
San Rafael

Poly Sci Poem

The lies propagate, and our freedoms unravel;
their cruel despotism stokes my fears.
Alexis de Tocqueville just sh** himself,
and he’s been dead for 166 years.

Rob Loughran
Windsor

Free Will Astrology: July 2-8

0

ARIES (March 21-April 19): The Hawaiian word refers to a primal darkness from which all life flows. It’s not a fearsome void, but a fertile mystery, rich with future possibilities and the ancestors’ hopes. In the coming weeks, I invite you to treat your inner life as . Be as calm and patient and watchful as an Aries can be as you monitor the inklings that rise up out of the deep shadows. Have faith that the cloudy uncertainty will ultimately evolve into clarity, revealing the precise directions you need.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): In the 17th century, the Taurus polymath Athanasius Kircher constructed a fantastical machine called the Aeolian harp. It wasn’t designed to be played by human fingers, but by the wind. It conjured music with currents invisible to the eye. I nominate this sublime contraption as your power object for the coming weeks, Taurus. The most beautiful and healing melodies may come from positioning yourself so that inspiration can blow through. How might you attune yourself to the arrival of unexpected help and gifts? Set aside any tendency you might have to try too hard. Instead, allow life to sing through you.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The painter Vincent van Gogh wrote, “Great things are done by a series of small things brought together.” That’s good advice for you right now. Your ambitions may feel daunting if you imagine them as monumental and monolithic. But if you simply focus on what needs to be done next—the daily efforts, the incremental improvements—you will be as relaxed as you need to be to accomplish wonders. Remember that masterpieces are rarely completed in a jiffy. The cumulative power of steady work is potentially your superpower. Here’s another crucial tip: Use your imagination to have fun as you attend to the details.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Welcome to a special edition of “What’s My Strongest Yearning?” I’m your host, Rob Brezsny, and I’m delighted you have decided to identify the single desire that motivates you more than any other. Yes, you have many wishes and hopes and dreams, but one is more crucial than all the rest. Right? To begin the exercise, take three deep breaths and allow every knot of tension to dissolve and exit your beautiful body. Then drop down into the primal depths of your miraculous soul and wander around until you detect the shimmering presence of the beloved reason you came here to this planet. Immerse yourself in this glory for as long as you need to. Exult in its mysterious power to give meaning to everything you do. Ask it to nurture you, console you and inspire you. 

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): In certain medieval maps, unexplored territories were marked with the Latin phrase hic sunt dracones—“here be dragons.” It was a warning and a dare, a declaration that no one knew what lay beyond. In the coming weeks, Leo, you may find yourself traveling into one of those unlabeled regions. Rather than flinching or dodging, I invite you to press forward with respectful curiosity. Some of the so-called dragons will be figments. Others are protectors of treasure and might be receptive to sharing with a bright light like you. Either way, productive adventures are awaiting you in that unmapped territory. Go carefully—but go.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In traditional Japanese carpentry, joints are made so skillfully that they need no nails, screws or adhesives. Carpenters use intricate joinery techniques to connect pieces of wood so tightly that the structures are strong and durable. They often require a mallet for assembly and disassembly. In metaphorical terms, you are capable of that kind of craftsmanship these days, Virgo. I hope you will take advantage of this by building lasting beauty and truth that will serve you well into the future. Don’t rush the joinery. If it’s not working, don’t force it. Re-cut, re-measure, breathe deeply and try again.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Here’s one of my unruly rules about human competence: In every professional field, from physicians to lawyers to psychics to teachers, about 15% of all the practitioners are downright mediocre, even deficient. Seventy-five percent are at least satisfactory and sometimes good. And 10% of the total are surpassingly excellent, providing an extraordinary service. With this in mind, I’m happy to say that you now have a knack for gravitating toward that exceptional 10% in every domain you are drawn to. I predict that your intuition will consistently guide you toward premium sources.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): The Japanese concept of shinrin-yoku means “forest bathing.” It invites people to immerse themselves in the natural world, drawing on its restorative power. In accordance with astrological portents, I urge you Scorpios to maximize your forest bathing. To amplify the enrichment further, gravitate toward other environments that nourish your soul’s need for solace and uplift. The naked fact is that you need places and influences that offer you comfort, safety and tender inspiration. Don’t apologize for making your life a bit less heroic as you tend to your inner world with gentle reverence. 

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): The camera obscura was a precursor to modern cameras. It projected the outside world upside down onto interior walls. Artists loved it because it helped them see reality from new angles. I hereby proclaim that you, Sagittarius, will be like both the artist and the camera obscura lens in the coming weeks. Your perceptions may feel inverted, strange, even disorienting, but that’s a gift. So let unfamiliarity be your muse. Flip your assumptions. Sketch from shadow instead of light. Have faith that the truth isn’t vanishing or hiding; it’s simply appearing in unfamiliar guises. Don’t rush to turn right-side-up things. Relish and learn from the tilt. 

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): I’m sure you enjoy gazing into some mirrors more than others. It’s amazing how different you might look in your bathroom mirror and the mirror in the restroom at work. Some store windows may reflect an elegant, attractive version of you, while others distort your image. A similar principle is at work in the people with whom you associate. Some seem to accentuate your finest attributes, while others bring out less flattering aspects. I bring this to your attention, dear Capricorn, because I believe it will be extra important in the coming weeks for you to surround yourself with your favorite mirrors.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Leonardo da Vinci filled thousands of pages with sketches, notes and experiments. He never finished many of them. He called this compilation his “codex of wonder.” It wasn’t a record of failures. It was an appreciation of his complex process and a way to honor his creative wellspring. Taking a cue from da Vinci’s love of marvelous enigmas, I invite you to be in love with the unfinished in the coming weeks. Make inquisitiveness your default position. Reconsider abandoned ideas. Be a steward of fertile fragments. Some of your best work may arise from revisiting composted dreams or incomplete sketches. Here’s your motto: Magic brews in the margins.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): In the remote Atacama Desert of Chile, certain flowers lie dormant for years, awaiting just the right conditions to burst into blossom in a sudden, riotous explosion of color and vitality. Scientists call it a superbloom. Metaphorically speaking, Pisces, you are on the verge of such a threshold. I’m sure you can already feel the inner ripening as it gathers momentum. Any day now, your full flowering will erupt—softly but dramatically. You won’t need to push. You will simply open. To prepare yourself emotionally, start rehearsing lively shouts of “HALLELUJAH. HOORAY. WHOOPEE.”

Homework: What action or project could you undertake that would provide you with a rich new sense of meaning? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

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