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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
The Books Briefing: What Very Different Places Have in Common
Gary Shteyngart finds the universal in Cape Town.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Trump’s Wall Street-Style Takeover of Venezuela
What Trump wrought in Venezuela could have come from a Wall Street playbook.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
How AI Is Reshaping the Battlefield
Anthropic, the Pentagon, and the question of AI use in the military
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
The Iran War’s Unnerving New Phase
Donald Trump is trying to keep attacks on energy infrastructure from escalating. He might not be able to.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
The Dethroning of Cesar Chavez
One of the most revered figures in American history can no longer be called heroic. But the movement he led can be.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
The Hypocrisy at the Heart of the AI Industry
Tech companies believe in intellectual property, but not yours.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
An Unlikely Recipient for the Twain Prize
Bill Maher has been chosen to receive the award before the Kennedy Center shuts down for a two-year renovation.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Pop Culture’s Romance Allergy
Culture has little interest in love anymore. The consequences could be dire.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
We’d Be Winning This War if It Weren’t for Your Coverage
Clap! Why don’t you clap?
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Sondheim Was a Confessional Artist
A recently published book casts doubt on the composer’s insistence that his enduring musicals were never autobiographical.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Photos of the Week: Amish Birders, Oscar Winner, Newborn Sloth
Blizzard conditions in Wisconsin, lava flows on the island of Réunion, military drills in the Canadian Arctic, and much more
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
The Homicide Upending French Politics
A recent killing of a neo-Nazi activist could bring France’s far-right party closer to power than it’s ever been.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Democrats Are Exorcising the Ghost of Iraq
In 2002, most ambitious Democrats supported a Middle Eastern war. In 2026, most oppose it.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Trump Had No Plan B for Iran
And it shows.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Why the Senate Is Debating a Doomed Elections Bill
President Trump has said that passing the SAVE America Act would “guarantee the midterms” for Republicans.
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
The Incredible Story of the Cartel Olympics
A Mexican athlete said he was kidnapped and forced to compete for his life in a tournament of gangs. But was he actually playing a different...
The Atlantic
March 20, 2026
Special Preview: May 2026 Issue
Read the full print edition of The Atlantic from the Special Preview: May 2026 issue
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
The IRS Is in Trouble
The Trump administration’s budget cuts are looming over Tax Day.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
The Longevity Bros Are Cold Plunging Wrong
The practice has its benefits. Just not the ones wellness influencers are loudest about.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 19, 2026: Fairy Tales
The layer of wispy, white clouds that frequently drapes over Cape Town’s Table Mountain is, fittingly, known to locals by what name?
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
The Father of American Scarcity Politics
Paul Ehrlich’s population pessimism should not outlive him.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
How Long Is 15 Minutes of Fame, Really?
Celebrities can stay relevant for longer than ever now.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
The West Is Roasting
This week’s record-breaking heat dome augurs badly for the months to come.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
The Misguided New Rules of Cheating on Your Partner
Micro-cheating includes all sorts of internet behavior that, to many people, might just seem innocent.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
How to Save a Dying Friendship
It’s not too late to start showing up.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
The 'Seinfeld' Principle of COVID Fiction
Writing self-absorbed characters making their way through the pandemic doesn’t seem like it should work.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
Trump Is Kicking the Economy While It’s Down
How the war with Iran could lead to a recession
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
Israel Is Missing Its Big Chance in Lebanon
The Lebanese are furious with Hezbollah, but Israel keeps giving it more reasons to fight.
The Atlantic
March 19, 2026
Trump Is Betraying Iran’s Pro-Democracy Protesters
He toyed with their hopes, raising expectations he never meant to fulfill.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
The Lesson of Tulsi Gabbard’s Flip-Flop
The existence of war skeptics in a president’s Cabinet is not a valuable indicator of how that president will act.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
A Disturbing New Low in the Polymarket Era
Maybe turning war into a casino was a bad idea?
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 18, 2026: Remember Lycos? Me, Neither.
Lycos and AltaVista were early entries in a tech field now dominated by what single provider that officially launched in 1998?
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
Photos: Birds in Early Springtime
Recent images of some of our fine feathered friends at work and at play in the warming Northern Hemisphere.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
The David Frum Show: Why Britain Is Saying No to Trump’s Iran War
Alastair Campbell on the end of the U.S.-U.K. “special relationship.” Plus: Why Democrats in Congress cannot ignore their duty, and The Dire...
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
The Iran War's Next Threat Is to Food and Water
A prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz could unleash a humanitarian crisis.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
Who’s In Charge of Vaccines Now?
A judge suspended the CDC’s vaccine advisory committee, but also said the agency should be consulting it before making recommendations.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
Why Does Cory Booker Think This Time Will Be Different?
“You could love your neighbor and punch somebody in the face.”
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
What AI ‘Friends’ Reveal About Human Friendship
Social chatbots offer relationships that are low effort, completely personalized—and hollow.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
What Caused the D.C. Sewer Disaster
America’s aging infrastructure doesn’t just mean the presence of structural weaknesses but a lack of knowledge about those structural weakne...
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
How ‘America First’ Became ‘America Alone’
The dangerous fantasy of total independence
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
The Same War, on a Loop
We’ve gotten all too used to missile alerts, existential anxiety, and suspicions of political bad faith.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
Why Iran Won’t Surrender
The Islamic Republic is designed to endure crises and fight asymmetric wars.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
Democrats Have a 'Slopulism' Problem
Donald Trump’s opponents are failing to articulate a defensible economic-policy vision.
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
The Horseshoe Theory of Polyamory
The Horseshoe Theory of Polyamory
The Atlantic
March 18, 2026
OpenAI’s First-Mover Disadvantage
Inventing a market is less important than perfecting one.
The Atlantic
March 17, 2026
Just How Much Risk Is Trump Willing to Take in Iran?
The outcome of the war in Iran may come down to just how much risk he can take.
The Atlantic
March 17, 2026
The First Big Administration Defection Over Iran
Joe Kent has quit. Will Tulsi Gabbard be next?
The Atlantic
March 17, 2026
Who Will Apologize for D.C.’s Tornado Bust?
Some meteorologists made a lot of noise as the storm loomed—and when it failed to materialize.
The Atlantic
March 17, 2026
The Cautionary Tale of Joe Kent
The conspiracist anti-war activist completely misunderstood the movement and the president he served.
The Atlantic
March 17, 2026
The Logic of Joe Kent’s Resignation Letter
If Trump can never be wrong, then he can only be wronged.- 1
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