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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
March 27, 2026
The Shocking Speed of China’s Scientific Rise
When will Chinese research pull ahead of ours?
The Atlantic
March 27, 2026
The Tension That Defines Modern Life
Most people need a smartphone. But many want to use it less.
The Atlantic
March 27, 2026
Homophobia Is Back. It’s Different Now.
Americans are burned-out, frustrated, and hunting for scapegoats.
The Atlantic
March 27, 2026
Who Needs Tanks In the Age of Drones?
Ukrainian drones have made artillery and armored vehicles look obsolete. Why is the world still buying them?
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
The Tacit Politics of Pixar’s Latest Hit, ‘Hoppers’
Hoppers offers a surprisingly radical message for a story about talking animals.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
Shockingly, ICE Hasn't Fixed the Airport Crisis Yet
Perhaps because they're not trained to expedite the long lines that are making travel so difficult
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
Critics Have a New Way to Describe the Trump Administration
Calling his presidency a “regime” has some benefits, but it underestimates the resilience of the 250-year-old republic.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
The AI Boom Wasn’t Built for the Polycrisis
“There are too many ways for it to fail for it not to fail.”
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
The Reason Trump May Pull Back From the Brink
The president is discovering the high stakes of an escalation that damages energy facilities.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
The Countdown to a Ground War
The president wants to avoid a long, messy entanglement, but all of the ground options promise to be just that.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 26, 2026: AI Code, Airport Code
What painter who shares his first name with a popular AI chatbot is known for his monumental depictions of water lilies?
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
How to Believe in God
Scientific evidence for faith misunderstands faith.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
NATO’s Terrible Position
Trump wants help from allies, but they don’t want to be pulled into a war.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
A Life of Close Observation
Revisiting Tracy Kidder’s work for The Atlantic
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
A Prison That Offers a Strange Kind of Freedom
In Charlotte Wood’s The Natural Way of Things, a group of captive women discover who they might become beyond the control of men.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
ICE Might Be Violating America’s Other Bill of Rights
To keep rogue agents in check, we need to look beyond the Constitution.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
The Worst Airport in America
Traveling by plane anywhere is bad right now, but in some places, it’s worse.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
E-Verify Is No Silver Bullet
Focusing enforcement on employers might be the easiest choice in immigration policy—just as soon as you make all of the hard ones.
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
Protecting a Hero Too Long
The pressure to shield men who hurt women
The Atlantic
March 26, 2026
Meet the New ICE
Same as the old ICE?
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
OpenAI’s Identity Crisis
The company’s sudden decision to pull the plug on Sora is a sign of deeper trouble.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
RFK Jr. Is Losing His Grip on the CDC
The Trump administration seems to be putting MAHA on notice.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
Trump Is Asking to Be Bailed Out Again
The president’s eagerness to act keeps getting him into difficult spots—which he then demands that legislators and the public help him escap...
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 25, 2026: Charles Dickens
What nighttime disorder was previously called “Pickwickian syndrome,” after an overweight, underslept Charles Dickens character?
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
Claude Takes On Monet
Why is Anthropic sponsoring an exhibition about Monet?
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
A Landmark Verdict Against Meta and Google
Jurors found the companies liable for building apps that inflicted mental-health problems on a teenager, and similar lawsuits are on the hor...
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
The War With Iran Is Exposing Big Problems for the Military
What we have learned about the strengths and weaknesses of the American way of war.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
Scenes from the Canadian Arctic
Carlos Osorio, a photojournalist with Reuters, recently traveled to Canada’s northern reaches to document military exercises, daily life, ro...
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
The Far-Right Algorithm: Anti-Churchill, Anti-West
The historian Andrew Roberts on why many right-wing podcasters now believe that the wrong side won the Second World War, and the rise of alg...
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
The U.S. and Iran Are Fighting a Massively Asymmetrical War
The Strait of Hormuz presents a classic war theater for an insurgency to bog down superior forces.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
How AI Is Creeping Into The New York Times
Artificial intelligence seems to be turning up, undisclosed, in the opinion pages of major news publications.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
LaGuardia’s Air Traffic Controllers Had Too Much to Do
Having two controllers on a midnight shift might be standard procedure, but they can still be overwhelmed.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
Are You Coal or a Horse?
How to guess if your job will exist in five years
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
The Deep Risk That Republican Hawks Overlooked
If the Iran war goes badly, the isolationist, anti-Israel wing of the party is likely to steer the GOP’s future.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
Where Are All the Campus Protests?
Two years ago, students occupied buildings and colonized the quad. Now the same places are strangely silent.
The Atlantic
March 25, 2026
How to Make Better Decisions
Some people look to bold, visionary leaders. Others value technocratic expertise. But there’s a third alternative.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
A Useful Way to Understand Trump’s Decision Making
Market fluctuations are one guide to the president’s foreign policy.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
Is There a Better Way to Watch TV?
The tyranny of decision fatigue suggests otherwise.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 24, 2026: Ill-Fated Francophilia
Last year, the Golden State Valkyries became the first new franchise since 2008 to join what professional-sports league?
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
Military Families Once Again Brace for a Knock
For the first time in years, the U.S. is losing service members to a foreign war.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
The Iranians Losing Faith in America
I’ve spoken with more than a dozen Iranians since the start of the war. Most are terrified, and some are losing faith in America.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
Why America’s Catholic Bishops Started Sounding Liberal
Trump’s second term has transformed the priorities of the U.S. Catholic hierarchy.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
A New Era for Women’s Basketball
The next generation of WNBA players will be the richest in history. What did it take to get there?
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
The Meme-Washing of RFK Jr.
The online persona of America’s health secretary is very different from the man himself.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
Abandoned by America
An Afghan family in hiding waits in fear and hope.
The Atlantic
March 24, 2026
Is Trump Actually Having ‘Very Good’ Talks With Tehran?
The disconnect between the president’s claims and Iran’s denials underscores how little control either side has over the conflict—or its nar...
The Atlantic
March 23, 2026
Iran Is Trying to Defeat America in the Living Room
The regime knows that its best ally against American power is American public opinion.
The Atlantic
March 23, 2026
When Warning Lights Flash Red
Americans are learning that public safety is not a given.
The Atlantic
March 23, 2026
Europe’s Far Right Is Turning on Trump
The president’s attempt to influence elections across the Atlantic is backfiring.
The Atlantic
March 23, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 23, 2026: March Madness
Jon Scheyer took over as head coach of a basketball program helmed for the previous 42 seasons by what man with a much harder-to-spell last...- 1
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