Pluto is about to bulldozer its way through the construction site that is Aquarius, during the upcoming ingress on March 23, after almost 15 years in Capricorn. Things are going to be a mess for a bit, so get your hardhats on.
Let’s backtrack to Pluto’s last groundbreaking for some context. The year is 2008. Pluto has just ingressed Capricorn, our most commercial sign. Associated with the earth, mining, riches, bureaucracy, financial activity, Capricorn is basically our capitalist in the sky. Its influence tends toward worldly acquisition.
We will recall that Pluto’s ingress into the all-business Goat coincided with a vast economic meltdown, known as the Great Recession. At the root of the problem: shady lending practices. Homeowners, who were given bad loans by bad banks, began defaulting on their mortgages. No surprise there. The stock market crashed and the global economy buckled.
In the wake of that collapse, new laws were put in place to protect homeowners, by tightening lending practices by financial institutions, making it harder for them to prey upon people.
We get a good general sense of how Pluto functions from this backstory: it overturns, exposes, or breaks down in order to put something new in place. Such creative destruction is connected to the themes of the sign it’s in. Capricorn deals with commercial interests. Pluto impacts those.
As the Bulldozer leaves the Goat, it’s fitting, then, that we are feeling Pluto’s impact once again, as it pertains to Capricorn-related issues. The big news of late: financial institutions convulsing. Silicon Valley Bank just needed to be bailed out, as has Credit Suisse in Zurich. A recent headline of the Financial Times: “Banks scramble to reassure investors and regulators after flight of deposits.”
But, Capricorn tells only half the story of this Pluto transit. Aquarius is also being impacted. If Capricorn refers to commercial ventures, Aquarius represents themes of futurity, innovation, technological progress and breakthrough.
And so it only seems cosmically appropriate that the other big news no one can stop chatting about is, of course, ChatGPT and similar tech. The headline at the New York Times today: “A gold rush in funding inundates A.I. startups.”
If there was ever a phenomenon to kick off revolutionary Pluto’s transit into futuristic Aquarius, it’s the current think-piece mania around ChatGPT, which basically lets chatbots do everything for you (from homework to computer coding to Valentine’s poems), so you pretend that you can do everything yourself. In an amazing bit of irony, Clarkesworld Magazine, a popular science fiction journal, has had to stop accepting submissions for stories because of the exponential uptick of them written by people using ChapGPT’s vast machine learning to concoct tales of the future. It seems science fiction itself can’t keep up with reality.
How long will Pluto in Aquarius last?
This kind of future-is-now stuff is the essence of Pluto in Aquarius, beginning officially on March 23, 2023 and lasting until 2043. The forward thinking energy of the Waterbearer is going to feel outlandishly forward thinking due to Pluto’s influence. Life will seem utterly strange and disorientating, which is the nature of all revolutions, be they cosmic, technological, or political.
Because Pluto moves so slowly (it takes 250 years for it to orbit the Sun), the intensity of this initial ingress will last for a while. From March 23 of 2023 until the end of 2024, the Bulldozer will be transiting and retrograding between late degree Capricorn and early degree Aquarius. We have seen how financial activities have been impacted by Pluto-in-Cap, and we can expect similar stress and hand-wringing about Aquarius-related issues: intellectual property, academic integrity, the nature of authorship, AI-ethics.
These issues, of course, have been vexing us as a species for a while, but they will come increasingly into focus, as Pluto/Aquarius upends our lives with technological advances, which will only accelerate in the approaching years. So, what’s the advice? Sometimes, it helps to look backward, not forward–to history, not astrology. In the face of monumental change, our long and lurid historical record shows us that we, in the end, always survive, despite (or because) of the changes that threaten us.
And yet, given all that, there is one thing I can predict with certainty in these uncertain Plutonic times, dear reader: A robot will never be used to portend your astrological future within the space of these pages. Team Human. Forever.
Photo by Alexander Andrews on Unsplash