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CHINESE
ROOSTER YEAR OUTLOOK, PART 1
TERRIBLE EVENTS, ENDINGS AND NEW BEGININGS
by Michael A. Nystrom
BullNotBull.com
February 4, 2005
1.
The Chinese Calendar System
The
Chinese calendar system is the oldest continuous timekeeping system in
existence. It is a combined solar/lunar calendar, meaning that days are
measured by the sun,but months are measured by the moon. The
approximately 29.5 days between new moons constitutes one Chinese
calendar month. Since the lunar cycle does not correspond neatly with
the earth’s annual cycle around the sun, the beginning of the Chinese
New Year can fall anywhere between late January and the middle of
February on the Gregorian calendar. This year, the new moon on February
9, 2005 will herald the first day of the 4702nd Chinese year.
Under
the Chinese system, each year is designated by one of twelve animals --
Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Sheep, Monkey, Rooster,
Dog, or Boar. The upcoming year will be the Year of the Rooster. A
complete cycle of 12 calendar years constitutes a Great Year. Five great
years, (60 calendar years) represents one Cycle, and 60 Cycles (3,600
years) makes an Epoch.
While
China of the last 56 years under communist rule has been one of the more
backward places on the planet, it must be remembered that when it comes
to invention and innovation, the Chinese are historically no slouches.
They were the first to invent a number of “modern” wonders while
Europe was backward, mired in the Dark Ages. Their society was the most
advanced of its age. Some Chinese inventions include gunpowder
(originally for fireworks), the compass, paper, movable type printing,
the abacus, acupuncture, blast furnaces, wheelbarrows and water clocks,
to name just a few. Marco Polo brought the idea for Spaghetti back to
Venice, from his travels in China in the 12th Century. (Raviolio are
simply the Italian version of potstickers) It is even said that the
Chinese had a machine that could predict earthquakes!
So
what happened? How did a nation that was so far ahead fall so far
behind? That is a fascinating story with a very relevant message for
America, but it will have to wait for another time, because I’m afraid
I’ve digressed.
Cycles
of many kinds are found throughout nature, and there are cycles within
cycles within larger cycles. History is in fact a fractal, with periods
and events ceaselessly repeating over and over, again and again.
Specific places, names and faces – these may change, but the
underlying stories of the social
cycles remain, rising and falling, ebbing and flowing with the tide
of time.
As
a New Year dawns, it is therefore useful to take stock of our past, to
see if we can discern any patterns and discover any wisdom from the
events that have come before us. There are many ways of doing this, but
in keeping with the Chinese theme, I will look back at past Rooster
years to see what kinds of lessons, if any, they may hold. I have chosen
this project because these years seem to hold a number of significant
events that are relevant to our lives today. Beginning in the depths of
the Great Depression, with 1933, subsequent Rooster years include 1945,
1957, 1969, 1981 and most recently 1993. This is an impressive set of
years full of impressive events.
The
Chinese have traditionally considered anyone who lived 60 years to be
very wise, since they have lived through and seen one complete Cycle.
But since the cycle of human events is determined by human actions, and
since human life spans have elongated drastically in the last century,
it is plausible that traditional long-wave cycle lengths may be
increasing. It is for this reason, and because the Great Depression was
one of the most fascinating periods of the last century, that I begin 72
years ago with the Rooster year of 1933.
2.
Past Roosters
1933
- Terrible Events
The world was in the depths of the Great Depression, and the specter of
war and financial ruin haunted the world. Shanghai was occupied by
Japanese troops. Adolf Hitler, a man who had never held political office
in his life was appointed Chancellor of Germany in January of 1933. A
month later he staged a fire at the Reichstag, pinned the blame on his
political enemies, then bullied the sitting government to pass the Enabling
Act, making him dictator of Germany. The machinery of evil went into
overdrive as the Gestapo was established, non-Nazi political parties
outlawed, book burnings began, and the first Nazi concentration camp at
Dachau was completed, marking the start of the Holocaust. Today it seems
inconceivable, but it was only 72 years ago.
In
the US, Franklin Delano Roosevelt succeeded Herbert Hoover as President,
giving his famous “Nothing
to fear but fear itself” speech. The following day he declared an
emergency “bank holiday,” closing all US banks, and suspending all
financial transactions for a week. Apparently there was more than just
fear to fear, as he went on to outlaw the private possession of gold by
US Citizens, officially taking the US off the gold standard. Gold coins
were no longer legal tender and people were forced to turn in their gold
for fiat Federal Reserve Notes on pain of imprisonment. After 1933,
paper money no longer stated that it was backed by gold, because after
1933, it wasn’t. The statement was quietly removed from all bills. FDR
was not popular with the business community at the time, and there was
even an attempted
a coup against him.

Congress
got busy spending money on New Deal legislation, creating make-work
programs to try to end the Depression. Although the stock market had
bottomed just one year earlier at 41 (from a 1929 high of 381), the
unemployment rate stood at 25%, up from just 3.2% in 1929. Germany and
Japan left the League of Nations, charting the terrible course to war. Leo
Szilard came up with the idea for the nuclear chain reaction while
waiting for a red light on Southampton Row in Bloomsbury. Prohibition
ended, but marijuana and hemp were outlawed (yes, there was a time when
both were legal in the US, and it is a tragedy that industrial
hemp, one of the most useful plants on the planet, is still illegal
in the US). 1933 was one of the worst years of the dust
bowl.
1945
– Endings and Beginnings
The crescendo of violence reached a fever pitch as World War II
drew to a close in 1945. The Russians liberated Auschwitz in January,
where 1.5 million people were murdered. The US firebombed Dresden,
killing 35,000 humans, and Tokyo, killing 100,000. Kobe was hit, killing
8,000, and the U.S. sent 1,250 bombers in one night to destroy Berlin.
Adolf Hitler, realizing defeat, ordered all industry, military
installations, shops, transportation and communications facilities in
Germany be destroyed. Hitler took his own life as allied forces
approached his bunker in Berlin. FDR also died in this final year of the
war.
In
the month of August, Leo Szilard’s idea came to fruition on August 6th
in Hiroshima and again on August 9th in Nagasaki, Japan. Over 200,000
were killed, and WWII ended less than a month later. Was this the start
of peace? Not really; it was just the beginning of a new, different kind
of conflict. The US and Russia split Germany and Korea, marking the end
of the old war and the start of the Cold War. The Viet Minh, led by Ho
Chi Minh, took power in Hanoi, presaging the Vietnam war. But nations
made efforts to work together - The United Nations Charter was ratified
by the US, and the World Bank was formed. The computer was born: The
Electronic Numerical Integrator Analyzer and Computer - ENIAC, the
world’s first general purpose computer was completed.
1957
– A Quiet Rooster
After
all the activity of the previous two Great Years, 1957 was relatively
speaking, quiet. But 1957 still had its significant events. The USSR
launched the first manmade satellite, Sputnik, marking the beginning of
the space race. The first commercial use of nuclear power occurred in
Santa Susana, California. IBM released the FORTRAN programming language
for commercial sale, making it the most widely used computer language of
its time. Osama bin Laden was born. John Lennon and Paul McCartney, who
would go on to form The Beatles, first met at St. Peter's Church in
Liverpool, England. And an Asian flu pandemic that lasted into 1958
claimed the lives of over 1,000,000 worldwide, including 72,000 in the
US.
1969
- Nostalgic Endings
1969 holds a singular place in US history, as the end of the
fabled decade of the 1960s. Bryan Adams captured the feeling in his song
“Summer of 69:”
Oh
when I look back now
That summer seemed to last forever
And if I had the choice
I'd always want to be there
Those were the best days of my life.
In
general, it was a nostalgic year of endings. The last issue of the Saturday
Evening Post was published after 147 years on the newsstands. LBJ
who didn’t want to be president anymore, made way for Tricky Dick and
a new regime in the White House. The Beatles made their last public
performance on the roof of Apple Records and had their concert broken up
by the cops. Mickey Mantle retired from the Yankees. Ike, who took the
oath of office for his second term as president in 1957, and who
everybody liked, died in 1969. This was of course the year of Woodstock,
the big music blast that said goodbye to the decade of the ‘60s. Neil
Armstrong became the first man to set foot on the moon, marking the end
of the space race that started 12 years earlier. John Lennon left Paul
and the Beatles, and he and Yoko went off on their merry way imploring
the world to ‘give peace a chance.’ In the UK, the halfpenny gave
way to inflation and ceased being legal tender. A severe famine in China
was responsible for the deaths of an estimated 20 million. Hurricane
Camille, a Category 5 storm ravaged Mississippi, killing 248 and causing
$1.5 billion in damage.

Notable
new beginnings in 1969 included the Automatic Teller Machine, which made
its first appearance in New York City. ARPANET, predecessor to the
Internet, was born, and the Boeing 747 made its first flight from
Seattle to NYC. Wal-Mart Stores was officially incorporated, and Yasser
Arafat was appointed leader of the PLO, embarking on a reign of terror
of his own. Bell Laboratories developed Unix, Linus Torvalds of Linux
fame was born, and AMD, Intel's main competitor today was founded.
1981
- "Morning in America" (Start of the 1982 - 2000 Bull
Market just one year away!)
The world still refused to give peace a chance: John Lennon was shot and
killed in December of 1980. Ronald Reagan began his first term as
president, promising "Morning in America" and was shot just
two months into the job. Two months later, Pope John Paul II was shot
and nearly killed. Anwar Sadat, president of Egypt, was assassinated.
Walter Cronkite retired after 19 years on the air. The CDC first took
note that a rare form of pneumonia was taking the lives of homosexual
men in LA. These turned out to be the first AIDS cases. Who can forget
that the 52 American hostages in Iran were released in 1981? In a blow
to labor unions the world over, the Reagan personally fired 11,359
striking air traffic controllers who ignored his order to return to
work. This year he also gave the CIA the authority to support secret
Contra rebels in Nicaragua. The effort to support the Contras was a
major component of the Reagan Doctrine, championed by American
conservatives, that provided U.S. military support to movements that the
government didn't like.
It
seemed like quite an inauspicious, dark year at the time, but 1981 was,
like 1945, a turning point up from a bottom in some sense. It was the
first year that a woman, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, was appointed to
the Supreme Court. The IBM PC was introduced along with MS DOS. Pac Man
became the first worldwide computer videogame craze. And the great bull
market of 1982-2000 was just one year away.
1993
-
Bill
Clinton was sworn in as 41st president of the United States
-
The
First WTC bombing took place
-
Branch
Dividian complex was razed by Federal Authorities at Waco, Texas
-
IBM’s
$4.97B loss became the largest corporate loss in history
-
Arafat
and Rabin shake on peace deal in the Middle East
-
Intel
shipped the first Pentium
-
The
first piece of spam was sent
-
NAFTA
was signed, marking the start of the “giant sucking sound” of
jobs out of the US
3.
Predilections and Patterns
As
the years advance, the drama of the Rooster seems to lessen. In a way,
the events of 1933 - 1945 seem like a distant nightmare, but in another
way, they seem closer than ever, as though we stand on the brink of
another such period of terrible events. One thing that stands out
sharply from this review of years past is the ever presence of war and
human conflict. In 1933, the path to war was clearly set; indeed the
entire period from 1933 – 1945 was one long period of war. And even
when WWII ended, it continued to smolder on in ideological form, as the
Cold War, and expressed in violence in Korea and in Vietnam. Every one
of our Rooster years was touched by war, somewhere in the world. This is
not saying much, since every year of human history is marred by human
violence, and 2005 will be no exception. Humanity, at least to date,
seems to have a predilection for war.
The
second thing that stands out to me is a certain symmetry of events. For
example, both Hitler and FDR rose to power in 1933, and then died in
1945, a 12-year reign. The atomic chain reaction was first conceived in
1933, first tested and used for violence in 1945, then first used to
generate power commercially in 1957. The space race between the US and
USSR that was started in 1957 with Sputnik, ended in 1969 with Apollo
11. The Beatles met in ’57, broke up in ’69, and John Lennon was
shot in December of 1980, just one month shy of another Rooster year.
The first computer was invented in 1945, the first commercial
programming language released in 1957, in 1969 UNIX, Linux and the
ARPANET were born, 1981 came the IBM PC, and though the new Rooster has
yet to officially begin, Hewlitt Packard has just announced nano-molecular
technology that it expects will replace the transistor, the foundation
of modern computing. These are all major milestones in the development
of computer technology. And finally, Rooster years have been notorious
for terrible earthquakes, as seen in this Table:
Major
Earthquakes During Rooster Years
|
|
Date
|
Location
|
Magnitude
|
|
10/23/1873
|
California/Oregon
Coast
|
7.3
|
|
04/10/1909
|
Rat
Islands, Alaska
|
7.0
|
|
09/08/1909
|
Fox
Islands, Alaska
|
7.4
|
|
03/02/1933
|
Sanriku,
Japan
|
8.4
|
|
03/10/1933
|
Long
Beach, California
|
6.4
|
|
08/25/1933
|
China
|
7.4
|
|
01/15/1934
|
Bihar-Nepal,
India
|
8.1
|
|
10/27/1945
|
Iran
|
8.2
|
|
03/09/1957
|
Andreanof
Islands, Alaska
|
9.1
|
|
03/22/1957
|
San
Francisco, CA
|
5.4
|
|
07/02/1957
|
Iran
|
7.4
|
|
12/13/1957
|
Iran
|
7.3
|
|
07/25/1969
|
China
|
5.9
|
|
07/28/1981
|
Iran
|
7.3
|
|
01/17/1994
|
Southern
California
|
6.7
|
4.
Meaning?
Do
these events have any significance, any connection, or is this all
merely coincidence? Humans are notorious Meaning-Making-Machines,
finding patterns and reading meaning into them where in fact nothing but
randomness exists. Is this an example of the former or the latter?
There
is a recent trend in society towards the idea that there are no such
things as coincidences, that everything has meaning and happens for a
reason. I first came across this idea nearly a decade ago in the popular
best seller The
Celestine Prophecy. New Agers embrace such ideas whole heartedly,
while the strictly rationally oriented believe this is a shift away from
logic, towards dangerous, magical thinking. The truth is that humans are
both logical and emotional beings, and to ignore either of these equally
important sides of ourselves puts our species at great risk.
5.
Questions for You
If
the 2005 Rooster year were to resemble any of the past years, which,
would it be? Will it be a year of endings, new beginnings, or terrible
events? Or none of the above? If any symmetry were to appear in 2005 to
complete event started in previous Rooster years, what kinds of events
would arise? These are the questions I will be thinking about over the
coming week, and I invite you to think about them as well and email me
with your ideas. What kinds of associations came up in your mind looking
at the pictures? I promise to read all the emails, even if I cannot
respond to them all personally. But I will post the most interesting,
stimulating ideas (both good and bad!) in a fashion similar to these
responses to my last article: Comments
on ‘The Bull Market is
Dead! Long Live the Bull Market!

© 2005
Michael A. Nystrom
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www.bullnotbull.com
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