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Monday, March 2, 2026

SPACE CADETS / PLANETS IN A ROW

From Mars: Earth, Jupiter and Venus 

From the surface of Mars, the sky carries a different arithmetic of distance. The familiar blue world is no larger than a bright point of light, suspended above a horizon of rust-colored stone and wind-carved rock. 

Nearby, two other beacons—Jupiter and Venus—shine with a steadiness that belies the vast machinery of orbits and gravity that binds them all together. The foreground is unmistakably Martian: a plain of scattered boulders, iron-rich soil, and a sky washed in butterscotch haze. 

Dust in the thin atmosphere softens the light, turning sunset into a copper veil. Against that muted dome, the three planets appear almost modest—small, luminous reminders that our solar system is not centered on any one world. 

Seen from 225 million miles away, Earth loses its oceans, its weather, its restless news cycle. It becomes what it has always been in cosmic terms: a pale spark among others. The image collapses ego and expands perspective at once. Home is there, certainly—but so is context. 

On Mars, the night sky rearranges our loyalties. We are not merely Earthbound. We are planetary. 

NASA.

Sunday, March 1, 2026