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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
April 28, 2026
How the 2-hour Marathon Was Broken
Breaking the two-hour marathon barrier represents one of sport's greatest achievements in human endurance. This groundbreaking feat required...
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
The Shooting Is Not a Reason to Speedrun Trump’s Ballroom
The safe outcome on Saturday makes the case for deliberation and care.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
To Get a Comedy Into Theaters, Hide the Comedy
One of comedy’s best leading men returns to cinemas with … an action thriller?
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
Can We Make Events Like the White House Correspondents’ Dinner Safer?
Yes, but some level of risk is inevitable in a free society.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
The Briefly Introspective President
Trump was unusually calm, gracious, and reflective this weekend.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
Winners of the GDT Nature Photographer of the Year 2026
A collection of some of this year’s winning and honored photographs. Nearly 9,000 entries were submitted to organizers by member photographe...
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
Vance Doubts the Pentagon’s Depiction of the Iran War
The vice president is worried that the U.S. is running low on weapons.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
The American Pope vs. the American President
The pontiff has proved unwilling to subordinate his faith to politics, or to adjust his commitment to the Gospel in exchange for access to p...
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 27, 2026: Gas and Taxes
What fraction visible at basically every U.S. gas station originated as a parsimonious response to a 1932 one-penny gas tax?
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
Conservatives Must Fight Monster They Helped Create
The legal right spent decades empowering the presidency, breaking the constitutional balance in the process.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
The Correspondents’ Dinner Was a Security Success
But it’s time to rethink security at an event that is clearly so vulnerable.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
How Shakespeare Brought Down McCarthy
A new book on the Red Scare prompts the question: Does literature still have enough influence to bring down the powerful?
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
What Happens If Trump Nationalizes the AI Industry?
The Trump administration could exert much greater control over the AI industry.
The Atlantic
April 27, 2026
Maybe the Most Senior Members of Government Shouldn’t Be in the Same Room
Recent security incidents reveal critical vulnerabilities in governmental protocols regarding executive leadership concentration. When senio...
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
The Most Frightening Shooters Are the Smart Ones
A manifesto-like email allegedly sent by the White House Correspondents’ Dinner shooter suggests a murderous obsession with Trump’s politics...
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
Security at the Washington Hilton Did Its Job
Tragedy was averted at a Washington hotel, but such moments will happen again.
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
The President’s Unprotected Junior Advisers
An incident at a high-profile political gathering exposed critical gaps in security protocols for junior administration staff. The incident...
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
After the Shooting, MAGA Is Unusually Quiet
Instead of a crackdown on his enemies, Trump wants his ballroom.
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
Two poems by Luis Muñoz: ‘Love’ and ‘The Moment’s Questions in the Air’
None
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
Thou Shalt Not Post the Ten Commandments in Classrooms
Requiring schools to endorse biblical laws is both unconstitutional and counterproductive.
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
How Netanyahu Hurt America’s Jews
The Israeli prime minister’s focus is, as always, on himself and his near-term political needs. The plight of American Jews is simply not hi...
The Atlantic
April 26, 2026
A Shooting at the White House Correspondents' Dinner
A dispatch from the chaotic scene at the Washington Hilton
The Atlantic
April 25, 2026
How Trump Voters Are Reacting to the Economy
Panelists joined to discuss the president’s recent polling numbers, and more.
The Atlantic
April 25, 2026
The Case Against the U.K. Smoking Ban
All who value liberty should be concerned about its logic.
The Atlantic
April 25, 2026
The Strange Comfort of a Rewatch
Even in the age of infinite options, people keep returning to the movies, shows, songs, and books they know by heart.
The Atlantic
April 25, 2026
Can Thomas Massie Survive the Trump Barrage?
The president’s loudest GOP critic is trying to stay in Congress.
The Atlantic
April 25, 2026
Where Is Tulsi Gabbard?
Her irrelevance during a war suggests that America doesn’t need a director of national intelligence.
The Atlantic
April 25, 2026
Why Silicon Valley Is Turning to the Catholic Church
Priests and theologians want to shape the future of AI. Big Tech is listening.
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
Sam Altman Wants to Know Whether You’re Human
And he has a way to prove it.
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
How Short-Form Clips Took Over the Internet
You’re not watching the show. You’re watching the clips.
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
A ‘Let Them’ theory of Ideas
Dig into the backstory of any original thought, and you’ll find that its source is likely mysterious and communal.
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 24, 2026: New Deal, Old Dynasty
What Chinese dynasty that ruled from 1368 to 1644 stopped exploration and de-emphasized scientific learning (despite making some fabulous va...
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
Photos of the Week: Fallen Robot, Scooter Waterfall, Sunrise Panorama
Traditional horseback archery in Japan, a humanoid-robot half-marathon in Beijing, a sci-fi festival in England, a golf tournament in Louisi...
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
Photos of the Week: Giant Octopus, Scooter Waterfall, Sunrise Panorama
Traditional horseback archery in Japan, a humanoid-robot half-marathon in Beijing, a sci-fi festival in England, a golf tournament in Louisi...
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
James Talarico’s Tough Sell
In deep-red evangelical Texas, does his brand of Christian politics have a chance?
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
The Schools Where Anti-Racism Backfired
How an “ideological purity spiral” derailed some of America’s most promising classrooms.
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
The Stanford Inside Stanford
“Any VC is begging to shove money down our throat.”
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
The Fake Radicals Stealing Lemons
A New York Times podcast hosted Hasan Piker and a New Yorker staff writer for a discussion of lawbreaking, which they both endorsed as resis...
The Atlantic
April 24, 2026
‘Michael’ Is a Botched Job
A new biopic offers a warped and childish take on Michael Jackson’s life.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Seriously, Tucker Carlson? Come On
Media figures who have turned against Trump only in recent weeks have forfeited the right to be taken seriously in the future.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Since When Is Looting a Form of Virtue Signaling?
In some left-wing corners of the commentariat, moral rectitude is out. Flagrant disregard of the social contract is in.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
A Bitter Coda to American Reconstruction
The story of the Freedman’s Memorial shows just how quickly a nation’s ideals can erode.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Israel Could Have What It Most Wants in Lebanon
It just has to give up territorial ambitions and work with the Lebanese government to disarm Hezbollah.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
The Kash Patel Fallout
An interview with staff writer Sarah Fitzpatrick about her reporting
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Dry January, but for Your Smartphone
I spent a month with a group of people who aspire to a state of offline bliss.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
The Posting Will Continue Until Morale Improves
Trump’s Iran messaging seems desperate.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
The Confessional Era of Plastic Surgery
Celebrities aren’t just admitting they got work done—they’re showing all the details.
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 23, 2026: American Gerontocracy
What two benefit programs jointly account for more than one-third of all federal expenditures, paying out more than $2 trillion a year?
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Trump Voters Like Marco Rubio More and More
And J. D. Vance less and less
The Atlantic
April 23, 2026
Life Isn’t Easy in the OnlyFans Economy
TV is finally considering the relentless, creative work of making a living online.- 1
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