

R “Ray” Wang 王瑞光 #Cupertino #AI #Energy R.NFT
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@rwang0
@ConstellationR #CEO @DisrupTVShow 2X BestSelling Author @HarvardBiz Keynoter #Futurist Provocateur #EDM #DJ #Foodie #SVLife #TaiwaneseAm🇹🇼🇺🇸




“Although the opportunity is there… I don't think Beijing is in any capacity to take advantage of it.” — Gordon Chang on whether China will move against Taiwan or the Philippines as U.S. assets shift away from the Pacific

The US invests more than a trillion dollars a year in wars. China invests in technology, hospitals, high-speed rail, schools, teachers, new universities, roads, and its people. Which do you prefer?



Barksdale AFB was hit by multiple waves of drones over a week’s time. The base houses numerous nuclear weapons.










Tomorrow, March 20, 2026, our planet will experience one of its rare moments of cosmic symmetry: the vernal equinox, when day and night are as close to equal length as they get anywhere on Earth. This fleeting harmony occurs because the Sun stands directly above the equator, with Earth's rotational axis neither tilted toward nor away from our star. For a brief window, both hemispheres bask in nearly identical amounts of sunlight—approximately 12 hours of daylight and 12 hours of darkness at every latitude (with minor variations due to local geography and atmospheric effects). Earth's familiar 23.5° axial tilt is the root cause of our seasons: as the planet circles the Sun, one hemisphere leans toward the light while the other leans away. The equinoxes—vernal in March and autumnal in September—are the precise points in the orbit where that tilt becomes perpendicular to the Sun-Earth line, canceling out the seasonal imbalance. The term “equinox” derives from Latin roots meaning “equal night,” though in reality the split is never perfectly 50/50 everywhere. Atmospheric refraction bends sunlight, allowing the Sun to appear above the horizon a few minutes earlier at sunrise and later at sunset, slightly extending the perceived day. Still, the difference is usually only a matter of minutes—close enough to feel truly balanced. After tomorrow's equinox, the scales tip once more. In the Northern Hemisphere, daylight will steadily lengthen toward the long days of summer solstice. In the Southern Hemisphere, nights will begin to dominate as winter approaches. For thousands of years, humans have revered these moments of alignment. Megalithic monuments such as Stonehenge, the Chichen Itzá pyramid of Kukulcán, and countless other ancient observatories were carefully oriented to capture the Sun's equinoctial path—proof of how deeply this celestial event shaped calendars, planting cycles, festivals, and mythologies across cultures. In a universe of constant change, the equinox offers a rare pause: a day when Earth's tilt, orbit, and rotation conspire to create near-perfect equilibrium across the globe. Tomorrow is that day: a quiet reminder of the elegant geometry that governs life on our spinning world.

