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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
April 4, 2026
What Trump’s Address to the Nation Revealed
Panelists on Washington Week With The Atlantic joined to discuss the president’s first national address since the war with Iran began.
The Atlantic
April 4, 2026
How Some People Became So Averse to Hype
The more everyone loves something, the less you might want to join in.
The Atlantic
April 4, 2026
The Black Daughters of the American Revolution
More and more women of color are joining an organization once known as a bastion of racism and elitism.
The Atlantic
April 4, 2026
What an Ivy League Education Really Gets You
Economists have a new theory of why graduates of top colleges have so much career success.
The Atlantic
April 4, 2026
The Iranian Opposition’s Urgent Task
A fractious movement is coming to recognize the need for common ground.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
What Trump Wants From Cuba
A conversation with Vivian Salama about who stands to gain if America overhauls the island’s leadership
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
‘The Drama’ Is the Ultimate Case of Cold Feet
"The Drama" poses the question by taking it to an extreme.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 3, 2026: The Sea
NeeDohs are the latest in a lineage that includes Labubus, Tamagotchis, Pokémon, and what velvety items half-filled with pellets?
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
The Books Briefing: Unconventional Novels About Conventional People
In some great books, readers watch a character become disillusioned with their dreams of joyful conformity.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
The AI Industry Wants to Automate Itself
Silicon Valley is in a frenzy over bots that can build themselves.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Trump’s Stone-Age Strategy Will Lead to Tragedy
America and Iran are playing different games.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Is AI Going to Turn Us All Into Middle Managers?
What AI is actually doing to the workforce
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Photos of the Week: Holy Week, 'No Kings,' Guitar Farm
Office-chair racing in Japan, an orca swimming near Seattle, a sandstorm over the island of Santorini, the launch of NASA’s newest lunar mis...
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
You Don’t Really Need a NeeDoh—Do You?
Stores are sold out of the squishy toys. Shipments may not arrive for months. And parents—well, they need to chill.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Lily Allen’s ‘West End Girl’ Tour Ups the Ante
Lily Allen’s "West End Girl" tour makes her astonishing concept album even better.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Hegseth’s War on America’s Military
Someone needs to explain the Pentagon purges to the American people.
The Atlantic
April 3, 2026
Hegseth Removes Top Army Officer Mid-Iran War
A general is ousted and the Army secretary is in jeopardy, sources say.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Pam Bondi May Be Just the Beginning of Trump’s Purge
After Pam Bondi’s ouster, other top administration officials could be in jeopardy.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
The Next Attorney General Has an Impossible Job
Just like the last one
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 2, 2026: Moon Missions
NASA’s first flyby of the moon—three missions before humanity landed on it—is known by what name?
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Rachel Carson Has Known the Ocean
Her journey to the hidden depths of the sea invites a new way of seeing.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Pam Bondi Couldn’t Possibly Succeed
She did what Donald Trump wanted her to do. That turned out to be part of the problem.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Twilight of the ‘Cougar’
Recent depictions of May-December relationships are challenging cliché notions about women who date younger men.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Ukraine's Housewives Versus Rheinmetall's CEO
My interview with a tank maker provoked fury and memes—including from Zelensky.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
birthright-citizenship-case-calhoun
The legal question in the birthright citizenship case is jarringly easy to answer. The more difficult question is what kind of country Ameri...
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
The Manosphere Feels Betrayed
The Epstein files, Alex Pretti, now Iran?
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Trump’s Cozy Transportation Secretary
Sean Duffy is partnering with the industries he regulates in new ways.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
The Intellectual Right Is Mad at the Mess It’s Made
Conservatives are criticizing influencers for going too far.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
The Intellectual Right Is Mad at the Mess It’s Made
Conservatives are criticizing influencers for going too far.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Who Gets to Block the Sun?
Stardust sold geoengineering to investors. Now it needs to sell it to the public.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
How ‘Real Housewives’ Rewrote the American Dream
Bravo’s signature reality-TV show is a shorthand for a certain flavor of petty drama—and a way that many people now live.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Young People Are Falling Behind, but Not Because of AI
The case that AI is already stealing young people’s jobs is based on a statistical mirage.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
The Album That Made Me Fall Back in Love With Heavy Metal
Neurosis’s new record makes the right kind of noise to stand out in this overwhelming moment.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
The Pro-Immigrant Case for Opposing Illegal Immigration
Any viable reform coalition has to include voters who oppose unlawful immigration but support legal channels.
The Atlantic
April 2, 2026
Maybe Trump Should Not Have Given This Speech
His address raised more questions than it answered about the war in Iran.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
Why Doesn’t Anybody Realize We’re Going Back to the Moon?
On the ground at the Trump era’s most important space launch.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
The Justices Don’t Buy Trump’s Citizenship Arguments
The scandal is that the case got this far.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
The Anger Trailing Congress Around the Country
Even TMZ is channeling the national discontent.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
What Tracy Kidder Stood For
His deep, immersive writing had moral stakes and changed people’s lives.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
I Am Here to Watch the Birthright-Citizenship Arguments but Not in a Threatening Way
Can’t a president come watch his justices?
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 1, 2026: Computer Games
Levying a late-return fee is a common task in the 1990s-set video game Retro Rewind, which simulates employment in what bygone type of retai...
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
Where to Find a Better Housewife Escapist Fantasy
Crime-solving housewives have become less compelling.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
Watching War From the Strait of Hormuz
Graeme Wood on what he saw at the Strait of Hormuz and the lockdown of oil in the Persian Gulf. Plus: Trump’s war-information blackout and T...
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
It’s Not Gambling, It’s ‘Girl Math’
Prediction markets are trying to woo women through matcha memes and #girlboss ads.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
Smirking Past the Gallows
An ugly law backed by Itamar Ben-Gvir might never be applied—but will still do real damage.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
A Presidential Library Fit for a Real-Estate Mogul
Plans for a Miami skyscraper perfectly capture the ethos of the Trump administration.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
The Perils of One-Man Rule
Xi Jinping’s ruthless reign in China offers important lessons for aspiring autocrats.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
Why Trump Bungled Oil and Gas
The president doesn’t understand that markets are global.
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
The Lesson of a Thrilling March Madness
Nostalgists worried that giving athletes more rights would ruin college sports. This year’s NCAA basketball tournament is proving them wrong...
The Atlantic
April 1, 2026
U.S. Troops Could Soon Be on the Ground in Iran
The military is waiting for his go-ahead for high-risk ground operations in Iran.- 1
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