Pluto – personal and political

Pluto in Aquarius: Two Decades of Reckoning with Power and Identity

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Pluto – personal and political

Pluto’s Demands for Depth and Renewal (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Pluto, the slowest-moving planet in astrology, settled into Aquarius in 2024 and will remain there until 2043, marking a prolonged era of profound societal and personal upheaval. Fixed signs – Taurus, Leo, Scorpio, and Aquarius – bear the brunt of these shifts, grappling with transformations in career paths, relationships, family dynamics, and self-identity that began last year. Even other signs detect subtler undercurrents. This extended transit coincides with tense celestial alignments, amplifying feelings of stagnation across the board.

Pluto’s Demands for Depth and Renewal

Transformation under Pluto rarely unfolds smoothly; it requires dismantling entrenched structures before any reconstruction can occur. The planet, once mythologized as the Lord of the Underworld, insists on confronting hidden emotional depths and discarding superficial facades. Those who cling to surface-level existence often find this phase most disorienting, as Pluto exposes vulnerabilities long buried.

The Sumerian myth of Inanna illustrates this process vividly: the goddess descended into the underworld, shedding her adornments layer by layer until raw and humbled, aided not by grandeur but by humble earth beings. Pluto’s influence similarly strips away illusions, fostering resilience through trial. Fixed signs, in particular, navigate these changes incrementally, as the planet’s deliberate pace allows time for integration.

Tense Aspects Heighten Everyday Struggles

This weekend brought a challenging square between the Taurus Sun and Pluto, creating a sense of blockage and powerlessness. Progress demands either steadfast effort or surrender to unchangeable realities. Later in May, Mars in Taurus forms a similarly frustrating square to Pluto, intensifying risks and frustrations.

Such hard aspects recur roughly six times annually with the Sun or Mars, weaving tension into life’s fabric. They affect all signs, though mildly for most, underscoring Pluto’s universal reach. Acceptance becomes key, as immediate resolutions prove elusive.

Pluto’s Historical Footprint Across the Zodiac

Every 20 to 30 years, Pluto’s transit through a sign reshapes cultural landscapes. From urban booms to global crises, these periods correlate with seismic shifts in technology, politics, and social norms. The current Aquarius phase squares the 1980s Scorpio transit, evoking memories of financial deregulation under leaders like Thatcher and Reagan.

Pluto Transit Period Key Developments
Aquarius 1532–1552 Henry VIII splits from Rome; Catholic-Protestant schism
Gemini 1882–1912 Skyscrapers, telecom boom; electrical age; yellow journalism
Cancer 1912–1937 World War I; women’s emancipation; Wall Street Crash; Great Depression
Leo 1937–1956 Fascism; World War II; nuclear bombs; Baby Boomers
Virgo 1956–1971 Polio/measles vaccines; Medicare Act; EEC formation; Asian flu; Suez Crisis
Libra 1971–1983 Divorce surge; women’s independence; Equal Rights laws; Watergate
Scorpio 1983–1995 Economic shifts; AIDS emergence; Brinks-Mat robbery
Sagittarius 1995–2008 Globalization; Schengen; terrorism rise; Oklahoma bombing
Capricorn 2008–2023 Financial crash; populism; migrant crisis; Obama election
Aquarius 2024–2043 Ongoing: technology, collectives, innovation amid power struggles

Privatization’s Legacy and Private Equity’s Rise

The 1980s Scorpio Pluto era unleashed deregulation, privatizing public services and prioritizing markets over state oversight. A recent book, The Asset Class by Hettie O’Brien, exposes how private equity now dominates essentials like housing, healthcare, and utilities. “You don’t know their names, but they own the house you rent. They own your hospitals, nurseries and care homes, the media you consume and the companies you work for,” O’Brien writes.

In the UK, underfunded regulation has allowed profit motives to erode service quality. Care homes, for instance, extract fees from residents’ assets while skimping on staff wages and conditions, treating the elderly like “the human equivalent of ATM machines.” This model rewires public infrastructure to favor elites, stakeholders from workers to patients suffer amid stagnant improvements. O’Brien argues it has “rewire[d] the state in service of a wealthy elite.”

Toward Egalitarian Reforms in Aquarius

The prior Pluto in Aquarius, ending in upheaval, saw Paris revolt against entrenched wealth, fueled by a Uranus-Pluto opposition absent this cycle. Yet Aquarius’s progressive energy hints at collective pushback against 1980s-style greed, symbolized by figures like Gordon Gekko. Over the next two decades, expect tensions between innovation and inequality.

Stakeholders – workers, tenants, patients – face practical fallout from entrenched privatization, but Pluto’s transit may catalyze demands for equity. Perseverance through current blocks could yield deeper societal renewal. As structures crumble, the potential emerges for systems aligned with broader welfare.

About the author
Lucas Hayes

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