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If this is your first visit, welcome! This site is devoted to my life experiences as a Filipino-American who immigrated from the Philippines to the United States in 1960. I came to the US as a graduate student when I was 26 years old. I am now in my mid-80's and thanks God for his blessings, I have four successful and professional children and six grandchildren here in the US. My wife and I had been enjoying the snow bird lifestyle between US and Philippines after my retirement from USFDA in 2002. Macrine(RIP),Me and my oldest son are the Intellectual migrants. Were were born in the Philippines, came to the US in 1960 and later became US citizens in 1972. Some of the photos and videos in this site, I do not own. However, I have no intention on infringing on your copyrights. Cheers!

Friday, April 3, 2026

The Battle for Space Supremacy- Artemis II Fly Over to the Moon

The New Space Race: A Battle Beyond Earth

Several months ago, I came across an article describing what many now call Space Race 2.0-a growing competition between the United States, China, and Russia for dominance beyond our planet. At the time, it felt like a distant geopolitical chess game. Today, it feels immediate, real, and consequential.

Unlike the Cold War space race of the 1960s, this new contest is not just about planting a flag on the Moon. It is about who will shape the future of humanity in space-economically, militarily, and even philosophically.

From Flags to Foundations

The United States, through NASA’s Artemis program, is no longer just aiming to revisit the Moon, it wants to stay. Recent developments show a dramatic shift in strategy: instead of orbiting stations, NASA is now prioritizing a permanent lunar base, with plans stretching into the late 2020s. 

This is a profound change. The goal is no longer symbolic victory, but long-term presence-habitats, infrastructure, and eventually a stepping stone to Mars.

China, meanwhile, is not far behind. It has already demonstrated remarkable capabilities: a functioning space station, lunar sample-return missions, and an ambitious roadmap to land astronauts on the Moon by around 2030. 

What stands out to me is China’s consistency. While U.S. space policy can shift with political winds, China operates with a long-term, state-driven vision that steadily closes the gap. 

Russia, once a dominant force, now appears to be fading as a primary competitor. Economic pressures, sanctions, and technological setbacks have limited its role, pushing it into a secondary partnership position—often aligned with China. 

The Rise of Private Power

Perhaps the most fascinating twist in this modern space race is the role of private companies.

Unlike the Apollo era, today’s competition is fueled not just by governments, but by innovators like SpaceX and others driving down launch costs and accelerating access to orbit. Space is no longer an exclusive domain, it is becoming a marketplace. This commercialization changes everything. It means:

  • More satellites
  • More data
  • More economic opportunity
  • And, inevitably, more competition

Space as a Military Frontier

Let us not ignore the uncomfortable truth: space is also becoming a theater of military strategy.

Both China and Russia are actively developing technologies designed to disrupt satellites-systems that could cripple communication, navigation, and defense networks. 

In today’s world, satellites are not luxuries-they are the backbone of modern life:

  • GPS navigation
  • Financial transactions
  • Weather forecasting
  • National security

Control space, and you influence life on Earth.

The Moon: The New Strategic High Ground

Why the Moon? Why now? Because the Moon is not just a destination, it is a resource hub.

Water ice at the lunar poles could be converted into fuel. Rare minerals could support future industries. And strategically, whoever establishes a presence first could define the rules of access, what some experts fear could become “keep-out zones.” 

In many ways, this echoes Earth’s history of exploration, only this time, the stakes are planetary.

A Personal Reflection

As I reflect on this unfolding story, I cannot help but feel both awe and fear- mix of excitement and unease.

On one hand, humanity is reaching outward again, pushing boundaries, dreaming big. There is something deeply inspiring about that.

On the other hand, we seem to be carrying our earthly rivalries with us into the heavens.

Will space become a place of collaboration or conflict? Will it unite us as a species or divide us further?

Final Thoughts

The battle for space supremacy is no longer science fiction. It is happening now, quietly, steadily, and with profound implications for our future.

The United States brings innovation and alliances. China brings discipline and long-term strategy. Russia, though diminished, still plays a role in shaping alliances.

But perhaps the most important player is not any single nation. It is humanity itself.

Because in the end, the real question is not who wins the space race. It is whether we remember, as we reach for the stars, that we all share the same fragile home below.


Meanwhile, here's the AI Overview: 

In 2026, the battle for space supremacy has transitioned from a purely scientific pursuit into a high-stakes "great-power competition"
. The U.S. and China are currently racing to establish a permanent presence on the Moon, while private companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin battle for dominance in heavy-lift launch capabilities.
The Geopolitical Front: U.S. vs. China
The primary theater of competition is the Lunar South Pole, believed to contain valuable water ice for fuel and life support.
  • United States (Artemis Program): NASA is racing to return humans to the Moon's vicinity with the Artemis II mission, currently targeting a launch as early as March 2026. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has emphasized a shift toward building a $20 billion moon base to ensure American leadership over China.
  • China (Lunar Missions): China is methodically executing its own plan, with the Chang’e 7 mission scheduled for late 2026 to scout resources at the south pole. China aims to land its first astronauts by 2030 and has already achieved milestones like returning samples from the Moon's far side.
The Commercial Front: The "Space Barons"
Private industry is no longer just a contractor but a central player in achieving "space superiority".
  • SpaceX: Remains the dominant force, with Starship undergoing critical flight tests in 2026 to demonstrate in-orbit refueling, a prerequisite for lunar and Mars missions. In early 2026, SpaceX announced plans for a self-sustaining city on the Moon.
  • Blue Origin: Stepping up its challenge with the New Glenn heavy-lift rocket, which is expected to debut in 2025/2026. Its Blue Moon Mark 1 lander is scheduled for a 2026 robotic demonstration mission to the lunar south pole.
  • Commercial Stations: As the International Space Station (ISS) nears retirement, companies like Vast (Haven-1) and Axiom Space are racing to launch the first standalone commercial space stations as early as 2026–2027.
Military and Economic Stakes
Space is increasingly viewed as a contested warfighting domain.
  • Space Superiority: The U.S. Space Force is focusing on "responsible counterspace operations" to protect assets and deny adversaries the ability to use space for military advantage.
  • The Lunar Economy: The space economy is projected to reach $1.8 trillion by 2035, driving nations to be first to secure resources like lunar ice.
  • AI in Orbit: A new "AI space race" is heating up, with startups like Starcloudreaching billion-dollar valuations for their plans to build orbital data centers.
As China and the US vie for the moon, private companies are ...
As China and the US vie for the moon, private companies are ...
The new space race: International partnerships (op-ed) | Space
While the world argues about politics, four people have left the planet and flew to the Moon ( A Fly By-No Landing).
NASA's Artemis II mission was launched on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, at 6:24 PM Eastern from Kennedy Space Center in Florida. It was the first crewed mission to the Moon since Apollo 17 in December 1972. Four astronauts flew around the Moon and will be back after 10 days: NASA's Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen.
Glover has now become the first Black person to leave Earth orbit. Koch become the first woman. Hansen the first non-American. The mission flew approximately 4,700 miles beyond the Moon and will reenter Earth's atmosphere at 25,000 mph, making it the fastest and farthest crewed spaceflight ever. NASA will stream the entire mission live from launch to splashdown.
The rocket was delayed three times and rolled back twice due to technical issues but passed its final review and was cleared for launch last Wednesday.

Video of Artemis II after LiftOff
This is the first image of Earth captured by Artemis II from space that clearly shows EARTH is NOT FLAT

Finally, Do you Know that the Moon is a Good Source of Helium-3

There is a resource sitting on the surface of the moon that could solve the world's energy crisis almost overnight. It produces no radioactive waste, no carbon emissions, and cannot cause a meltdown.
It is called Helium-3.
For billions of years the moon has had no atmosphere to deflect the solar wind, so Helium-3 carried by that wind has built up across the entire lunar surface.
Scientists estimate the moon holds up to a million metric tons of it. On Earth it is almost completely nonexistent, currently selling for around $3 billion per ton.
A single Space Shuttle cargo bay worth of it could power the entire United States for a full year.
China is not hiding its intentions. Its chief lunar scientist has publicly stated that the moon's Helium-3 could solve humanity's energy needs for 10,000 years. China has already returned lunar soil samples to Earth and is actively studying them for Helium-3 content.
The United States is responding. In 2025 the Department of Energy made the first ever government purchase of an extraterrestrial resource, three liters of lunar Helium-3. A startup backed by former NASA astronauts has announced plans to begin commercial lunar mining by 2030.
The 1967 Outer Space Treaty bans countries from owning the moon. It says almost nothing about mining it.
The country that gets there first and starts extracting first will control the most valuable resource in human history. The moon is not just a rock in the sky. It is the Persian Gulf of the 21st century.

The photo above is upside down. To the left, thats the top of Africa. To the right is South America. The green aura on the top is the southern lights. Photo Taken 4/3/26

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