When Mercury Meets the Trickster: Anonymous, Archetypes, and Digital Revolt
Revisiting the Astrology of February 7 to find out what it looks like when Mercury, Neptune, and Uranus call the misfits to rise.
The Misfit Genius, the Tech Guru, and the Hidden Identity
I posted the video below on TikTok on February 7, two days before Super Bowl LIX. If you watch the whole thing (thank you), you’ll hear me reference three archetypes near the end—misfit genius, tech guru, and hidden identity—and how I believed they were about to rise to cultural relevance in a major way.
At the time, I figured we might see some digital whistleblower stuff. Probably a hack. Maybe a leak. Maybe the return of some good old-fashioned information warfare.
Instead, on March 11, we got Anonymous.
If you’ve been avoiding the news lately (and honestly, good for you if so), you might’ve missed that information has been trickling out across TikTok and Reddit—not through corporate media or traditional means, but via short, loaded clips and coded language. We’ve been seeing the early stages of grassroots organizing in 2025 since January, and it’s spreading fast.
Then came the April 5 protests. And with them, this video:
Now, if you’re not deep into cult dynamics and hivemind psychology the way I am (hi, I’m weird), this might not strike you as a major moment. But it is. What we're seeing right now is a massive shift in how decentralized activism is attempting to organize across a divided nation with the help of some very smart organizers.
So... Who Is Anonymous?
In short? You. Me. All of us. There’s no secret club to join and no initiation ritual. Just a shared refusal to comply—The Sacred No.
We are Anonymous. We are legion.
We do not forgive. We do not forget.
Expect us.
It’s not about cosplay rebellion. Being Anonymous means acting like it. Speaking up. Standing your moral ground. Protesting, if you can. And if you can’t? Protest with your wallet. Protest with your clicks. Pull your attention away from the Big Box empires and toward something real, something human, something local. They watch those numbers. They feel it when we shift.
This is what digital resistance looks like.
Why This Matters
Remember how MAGA rose?
It wasn’t just rallies and red hats. It was 8Chan and QAnon. It was the QTubers. The weirdo bloggers. The fake-military guys in basements decoding “Qdrops” like they were national security experts. They made content. They went viral. They built audiences. Some ran for office. Some won.
They didn’t care if it was true. They cared if it landed.
QAnon vs Anonymous isn’t a fight. It’s a mirror.
QAnon offered everyday Americans a reason to believe in something. Something bigger. Something that made them feel important. Suddenly, they were insiders. They were in the know. They had secret knowledge the rest of us couldn’t grasp. They weren’t just struggling rural workers anymore—they were soldiers in a digital war. They felt smart, and they had information other people just couldn’t understand.
And they’d defend it to the bitter end. Because the cult gave them a place to belong.
Anonymous Flips the Script
When I first pointed out those archetypes—misfit genius, tech guru, hidden identity—I thought we were looking at a leak. Maybe a pile of stolen Trump campaign emails or some surveillance footage we weren’t supposed to see.
But no. What we got instead was a mythical return.
Not a person. A presence. A mood. A vibe.
Anonymous became the symbol we needed for a new kind of resistance. One built not on one central figure, but on decentralized belief—the kind that doesn’t need a hero, because it knows it is the hero. And it moves fast, underground, and with digital precision.
I believe the people behind these videos studied what happened in South Korea last December and started writing a playbook. Not for revolution. For reprogramming belief systems. For reaching the gaslit and the disillusioned and offering them another story to believe in—one that doesn’t require submission, but action.
We are watching a new era of resistance take shape outside the reach of corporate media and traditional propaganda pipelines. These are micro-movements, TikTok protest videos, whisper networks using memes and mystery to wake people up.
And it’s working.
One day, the history books might remember this moment.
Not the candidates. Not the polls.
But the myth. The movement. The quiet legion in the comments section who decided it was time to act.
And I hope when they write it down, they write it in all caps:
WE DO NOT FORGIVE.
WE DO NOT FORGET.
EXPECT US.