Luigi Mangione
Luigi Mangione (source: Wikipedia) Wikipedia finally has published a bio of Luigi Mangione that includes a date of birth. According to the site, the shooter of United Healthcare CEO Brian […]
Astrology, Fashion, Celebrities and You
Luigi Mangione (source: Wikipedia) Wikipedia finally has published a bio of Luigi Mangione that includes a date of birth. According to the site, the shooter of United Healthcare CEO Brian […]

Luigi Mangione (source: Wikipedia)
Wikipedia finally has published a bio of Luigi Mangione that includes a date of birth. According to the site, the shooter of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was born on May 6, 1998 in Towson, Maryland.
Without a time of birth, the natal chart is quite unremarkable. The sun and Mars are quite close together in Taurus. Mercury, Venus and Saturn all reside in Aries. Jupiter is in Pisces. The moon is in Virgo, although the degree can not be ascertained without a time of birth. The only thing that really jumps out to me is that the sun and Chiron are in a very tight opposition (the orb of that aspect can be anywhere from exact to about forty minutes).
Of course, I just had to punch his Sun/Mercury/Venus combination into the search tool on astrotheme.com to see what came up. The list was interesting. He shares that combination with a ton of recognizable names on the first page of results alone, including Gal Gadot, Tony Blair, Sofia Coppola, Rosario Dawson, Jean Paul Gaultier, Nicolas Ghesquière, Shirley Temple, Fred Astaire, Bianca Jagger, Lance Bass, Valerie Bertinelli and Kim Gordon.
What really fascinated me, though, was that the name Adam Lanza came up. Adam Lanza was the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooter.
Nevertheless, taking a deeper dive into Luigi Mangione’s horoscope isn’t really possible without a time of birth. To be honest, I’m more fascinated with his martyrdom in the context of Pluto’s ingress into Aquarius and the groundswell of hatred toward the billionaire class. Something is going on in the world. Right-wing governments and the oligarchs who run them might appear to making all the right moves if you believe the words of the corporate media that those same billionaires own, but people are pissed off. I can’t blame them!
Still, I won’t be hanging up a picture of Luigi Mangione above the desk where I write this blog, but I can understand how the world we live in will continue to be fascinated by him — whether or not he deserves our attention. This probably won’t be the last time I write about him . . .