The thing is, your first post made a wildly wrong claim, didn't it? And I showed you how you were wrong with some very basic facts and maths.
So here's a new word for you: introspection.
The correct response to finding that you have a made a big claim and got it completely wrong is to introspect. It should lead to such questions as "why was I so confident in my belief?"; "how did I get it so wrong?"; "were my priors getting in the way of correct thinking?"; "does my education on this topic lack substance"; and of course, the biggie, "if I was so badly wrong on this argument, which of my other arguments on this topic are also wrong?".
I know this feels uncomfortable to confront, but it's such a better use of your time than immediately writing up nine further arguments for your position. All nine of your next arguments are equally as poorly conceived as the first one you made, and that's because you've not done the introspective work you need to. One time-honoured way of doing that is through playing devil's advocate, testing the strength of your own arguments by arguing against them; another is the socratic method, discussing them with an interlocutor, which can help you stimulate your critical thinking, uncover your hidden beliefs, and draw out the internal contradictions in your arguments. You can ask an AI to act as the interlocutor; they have endless patience.
Why not pop off and do that, and we can come back to this when you've constructed a slightly more sophisticated approach to your analysis than "what do ya do at night with solar, when there's no wind?"