On July 19, 2025, China killed the silicon wafer. And with it, ASML’s monopoly, TSMC’s moat, and every American chip sanction. You just didn’t hear the explosion. Time to break it down. (1/21)
Most people think the chip war is about geopolitics. It’s not. It’s about atomic ratios. And China just mastered a law of nature the West still struggles to pronounce: stoichiometry. (2/21)
Stoichiometry is the a priori rulebook for matter. Not a lab trick. Not engineering. It’s the logic atoms obey when forming compounds. You get the ratios right or the structure collapses. Period. (3/21)
Silicon is forgiving. You can tweak and etch and polish. Add more doping. Fix things post-growth. That’s why the entire Western chip industry is addicted to photolithography and brute-force scaling. (4/21)
Indium selenide (InSe) is not forgiving. It’s a 2D compound. One atom thick. One indium per selenium. Anything less than perfect stoichiometry? You get garbage. Defects. No chip. No circuit. (5/21)
That’s what makes China’s breakthrough historic. Their scientists didn’t invent InSe. They cracked how to grow it perfectly. At scale. With atomic self-correction. No ASML needed. No permission slip. (6/21)
Their method vaporizes indium, condenses it into a liquid layer, and grows InSe by balancing the atomic ratio in real time. The process self-regulates the stoichiometry. That’s the key. (7/21)
They didn’t stop at flakes. They built 5 cm wafers. They etched transistor arrays. They proved it works on a chip, not just under an electron microscope. It’s fabrication-grade. (8/21)
This isn’t a lab paper. It’s the exit wound from the silicon era. The stoichiometric bottleneck is gone. The rest is just assembly. (9/21)
Part II: After Silicon
InSe outperforms silicon in every category that matters:
• 5–10x higher electron mobility
• Atomic thickness
• Tunable bandgap
• Lower power leakage
• Faster switching (10/21)
And unlike graphene, InSe has a real bandgap. It can switch on and off. That makes it a true semiconductor, not a science fair. (11/21)
With China’s new method, this material is now scalable. Which means the entire Western chip industry—built on legacy silicon and ASML tooling—just got outflanked at the atomic level. (12/21)
This wasn’t a node race. It was a material regime shift. While the West focused on 3nm vs 2nm, China rewrote the substrate itself. No EUV. No supply chain fragility. No fab dependency. (13/21)
They don’t need ASML. They don’t need TSMC. They don’t need CUDA. They don’t need Synopsys. The entire ecosystem was decoupled upstream—where the periodic table lives. (14/21)
Western press won’t touch this. There’s no stock ticker. No IPO angle. No Nvidia soundbite. Just a quiet atomic realignment happening under their feet. (15/21)
What comes next is deterministic:
• InSe-native AI accelerators
• Next-gen telecom chips
• Neuromorphic cores
• Fully domestic 2D logic stacks
• Military-grade compute, off-limits to sanctions (16/21)
China didn’t just win the chip war. It exited the battlefield. It no longer competes in silicon. It forges new material futures, governed by first principles, not supply chains. (17/21)
Every restriction the U.S. imposes from here out will be too late. You can’t sanction a law of nature. You can’t embargo a material you no longer understand. (18/21)
The future won’t be built on 2nm silicon. It’ll be built on atomically perfect InSe, grown in a Beijing lab, untouched by ASML, unseen by the West, and unshackled from the past. (19/21)
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The Pentagon’s latest prep for Chinese air defenses is not building better missiles or countermeasures. It’s building props.
(1/10)
Torch Technologies in Alabama just rolled out a full-scale replica of China’s HQ-22 surface-to-air missile. It looks the part, mimics radar and heat signatures, but it’s a hollow shell.
Trump’s tariff war is no master plan. It’s a sign the U.S. has run out of real leverage against a world moving on.
Trump expands use of tariffs to reach national security goals - The Washington Post share.google/tbb0o2cMViSLuY…
The U.S. is running out of leverage. Tariffs are no longer a trade tool. They are a public confession of weakness.
(1/8)
The Washington Post reports Trump is using tariffs to push countries into unrelated foreign policy concessions. Israel on Chinese port deals. South Korea on defense spending. India on Russian oil.
Friedmanism sold us the market as gospel. Now we have no national grid, no public vision, and no idea what we lost
As electric bills rise, evidence mounts that data centers share blame. States feel pressure to act - ABC News share.google/TXqlB9EVEc79d5…
Milton Friedman didn’t just change policy. He rewired America’s brain. For fifty years we have lived inside his worldview without knowing it.
(1/10)
Once, “public good” was central to every macroeconomics textbook. National grids, highways, public universities. These were investments in the backbone of the nation.
From toxic rare earth mines to women leading China’s tech rise this is the power shift no one saw coming
Confirmed - electric vehicles, solar panels and wind turbines depend on a single mine in China - and it is destroying its land and people share.google/DtIGhOek5Dkoyf…
The Bayan Obo mine in Inner Mongolia is a scar on the Earth. It feeds the world’s wind turbines, EVs, and solar panels but leaves behind poisoned soil and toxic lakes. (1/11)
The West loves to point at Bayan Obo as proof China’s rise is dirty. What they never ask is why China dominates these industries in the first place. (2/11)
Donald Trump said China has no drug problem, and he is not wrong when you compare it with the US. In America, entire neighborhoods are gutted by fentanyl and meth. Addicts shoot up on sidewalks in broad daylight. Cities pretend it is compassion to look the other way. (1/5)
In China, the idea of leaving people to publicly self-destruct is unthinkable. Dealers face life sentences or worse. Users are forced into treatment before they hit rock bottom. The social contract still says the health of the community comes first. (2/5)
In the US, we call this tolerance “freedom.” In reality, it is FreeDumb. A political culture that confuses neglect for liberty and treats self-destruction as a personal right. (3/5)