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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
July 8, 2026
The Age of Reading Is Over
Can civilization survive the postliterate era?
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Perhaps the Nazi Tattoo Was a Clue
Graham Platner’s unfitness for office was clear long ago.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
The Change to Trump's Power That Further Politicizes Everyday Life
A recent Supreme Court ruling isn’t just about expanding executive control—it’s about the government exerting partisan influence over more a...
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Fix This Travesty, FIFA!
Why win fair and square when the president can make a call?
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Animation Is a Test Case for Hollywood’s AI Creep
Traditional jobs, like animation, are changing rapidly, and not necessarily for the better.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Nigel Farage Wants a Mandate For Corruption
The British populist leader makes a Trumpian gamble.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, July 7, 2026: The World’s Richest People
The conceptual artist Marcel Duchamp’s most famous “readymade” sculpture—mischievously called Fountain—consists entirely of what common porc...
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
China’s Answer to AI Sticker Shock
Corporate America is starting to balk at the cost of AI agents. A cheap alternative from China looks more tempting than ever.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Lab-Leak Payback Has Begun
Indictments, subpoenas, and debarments are hitting American scientists embroiled in the controversy over COVID’s origins.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s Celeb-Networking Event
The superstar’s wedding turned her love story into a huge glad-handing opportunity.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
AI Is a Great Tool for Dictatorships
Chatbots are deftly disseminating China’s talking points.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Your Vivid, Vibrant Everyday Life
Welcome to Ordinary Extraordinary, our new eight-week newsletter series.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Emily Ruskovich: 'I Heard You Singing'
A short story
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
The Genes That Could Cancel Out a Fatal Diagnosis
The key to treating genetic disease might be hidden in other “modifier” genes.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
Reading ‘The Catcher in the Rye’ in the Manosphere Age
Beneath all the alienation, "The Catcher in the Rye," which turns 75 this year, has a surprisingly hopeful—and ethical—outlook.
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
What Biden Changed About American Foreign Policy
The most recent Democratic administration focused on adapting American power to a dangerous new world. Progressives are calling that vision...
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
The Demons of Maryville
A growing number of charismatic Christians see themselves as waging a spiritual battle against the forces of Satan. Sometimes those forces a...
The Atlantic
July 7, 2026
The Other Celebration of America
The World Cup has provided the unity that was lacking from the official 250th celebrations.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
Trump Comes for the Smithsonian's American History Museum
A White House report details what the administration wants to change in the Smithsonian—and suggests that a crackdown could be coming.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
Graham Platner's New Scandal and Authenticity's Limits
He said there wouldn’t be any more scandals, but a new Politico report threatens to end his Senate campaign in Maine.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
FIFA’s Lesson for Trump
The messy decision to reverse a red card against an American player shows what happens when an institution forfeits the benefit of the doubt...
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, July 6, 2026: Mystery Meat
Test your knowledge—and read our stories for a little extra help.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
A Very Bad World Cup Call
The red card against Team USA’s Folarin Balogun at the World Cup wasn’t good. FIFA’s decision to overturn it after hearing from Donald Trump...
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
The End of Discs
A more convenient world may not be a better one.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
The Military Pete Hegseth Wants
What America stands to lose as the Trump administration strips diversity from its military ranks.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
The Death of Renee Good Has Yet to Be Properly Investigated
Six months after she and Alex Pretti were shot on the streets of Minneapolis, little has come of the probes into their killings.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
‘House of the Dragon’: Even Queens Want a Day Off
On House of the Dragon, even queens want to take a break sometimes.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
The Age of the Trillionaire
Inequality remains a defining challenge.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
Fixing Social Security Is Easy, but It Isn’t Simple
Both liberals and conservatives misunderstand how to head off insolvency.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
The Administration Isn’t Even Pretending Anymore
More than 200 deaths later, the drugs keep coming.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
The ‘Consumer Socialism’ Trap
The wrong way to solve the affordability crisis
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
Introducing How to Touch Grass
It may be time to rethink our relationships with our devices.
The Atlantic
July 6, 2026
Small-Dollar Campaign Donors Are Hurting the Political System
The problem with donation mobs
The Atlantic
July 5, 2026
Brian Blanchfield: ‘From Idaho B Roll’
A poem by Brian Blanchfield
The Atlantic
July 5, 2026
What Trump’s July 4 Speech Revealed
The president demanded credit for a history that he regards as a sucker’s mistake.
The Atlantic
July 5, 2026
Prepare for Airplane Purgatory
The chances of getting stuck for hours in a grounded plane are soaring.
The Atlantic
July 5, 2026
Why Doug Jones Keeps Running
Alabama’s upset artist hopes the state is changing enough to elect a Democrat again.
The Atlantic
July 5, 2026
Music Is in Its Flop Era
The algorithms aren’t the only thing to blame for why some artists are failing to take off.
The Atlantic
July 5, 2026
A President With More Control, but Less Power
Slaughter is a necessary corrective to our age of unaccountable bureaucracy.
The Atlantic
July 4, 2026
Pope Leo’s Challenge to America on July 4
By spending the semiquincentennial mourning the plight of migrants, Leo sent an unmistakable message to his native country.
The Atlantic
July 4, 2026
How to Find Joy on a Quiet Day in
Home can be a place of adventure, not just stasis.
The Atlantic
July 4, 2026
The Most Perfect Coincidence in American History
How the simultaneous deaths of two Founding Fathers cemented one of the country’s most dangerous beliefs
The Atlantic
July 4, 2026
How to Define America in 30 Objects
What artifacts capture 250 years of work to attain the dreams of the Declaration?
The Atlantic
July 4, 2026
Trump’s Remarkable Losing Streak
The administration has lost at least a dozen election-related cases.
The Atlantic
July 4, 2026
What J. D. Vance Once Knew
Ten years ago, the vice president wrote that one day, voters would realize the truth about Donald Trump. That day has now arrived.
The Atlantic
July 3, 2026
Hell Arrives in Washington
My day of extreme heat in the nation’s capital
The Atlantic
July 3, 2026
How Elon Musk Became More Powerful Than Ever
The authors of Muskism break down the beliefs, business strategy, and political influence behind the world’s richest man.
The Atlantic
July 3, 2026
It Wasn’t Just the Founders
The conventional telling of America’s origin story leaves out perhaps its greatest heroes.
The Atlantic
July 3, 2026
The Books Briefing: The ‘Have It Both Ways’ Theory of Great Books
Many literary classics have a way of appealing to our lizard brains while questioning why we're so compelled by them.
The Atlantic
July 3, 2026
The Strange History of the Word "Equal"
The expansiveness of the concept helps explain its endurance.- 1
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