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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
How the Supreme Court Learned to Love Partisan Gerrymandering
Just a few years ago, Chief Justice John Roberts decried the practice as “unjust.” Now the Court is effectively encouraging it.
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
Europe Learns to Live with an Erratic America
Trump’s war in Iran shows foreign policy by petty feuds is NATO’s new reality.
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
The Candidate From ICE
A GOP primary in Ohio will test Trump’s mass-deportation push.
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
Why Stocks Keep Going Up
The boom is not as untethered from reality as it may look.
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
The End of Cigarettes Is Coming
The U.K. is phasing out smoking. How long will Americans tolerate tobacco—and other vices?
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
More Photos From Artemis II
NASA just released more than 12,000 images from their recent 10-day trip around the moon and back, collecting photographs taken by the four...
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
Why One Coach’s Personal Life Is a Sports-Wide Scandal
Mike Vrabel is facing questions about his personal relationship with a reporter. He should answer them.
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, May 4, 2026: Aquatic Geography
What waterway in Southeast Asia is the primary connector between the Pacific and Indian Oceans?
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
The One Tax the Rich Can’t Escape
New York’s proposed pied-à-terre tax is unlikely to chase anyone away.
The Atlantic
May 4, 2026
What’s Changed Since Jon Krakauer Climbed Everest
Scaling the world’s highest mountain is a very different experience than it was 30 years ago.
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
You Are Going to Miss Spirit Airlines
Spirit was awful. But a world without it is worse.
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
A Hilarious 'SNL' Sketch About Heartbreak Goggles
A standout sketch on last night’s "SNL" shrewdly illustrated all the ways that heartache can distort reality.
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
A poem by Athena Nassar: ‘Reflections in the Door of a School Bus and Other Doors’
A poem
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
The Internet Is Obsessed With Ovulation
What’s so great about a “natural” menstrual cycle?
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
What if Your Boss Monitored Your Emotions?
AI has supercharged worker surveillance—not just for productivity but for agreeability.
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
DOJ Enters a New, Even More Aggressive Phase
The department is growing bolder yet, cutting legal corners in service of getting President Trump the headlines—and revenge—he wants.
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
A Great Actor Who Is Also a Perfect Celebrity
Culture and entertainment recommendations from Dan Zak
The Atlantic
May 3, 2026
The Era of Rational Discourse Is Over
For Jürgen Habermas, who died in March, the essence of democracy was thoughtful back-and-forth argument.
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
How The Iran War May Play A Role in the Midterms
Panelists joined to discuss the economic fallout from the conflict, and more.
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
How to Find Focus When It’s Most Elusive
Concentrating on creative work requires setting limits.
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
The Fight to Save the Yachats Whale
A juvenile humpback washed ashore in Oregon. Could anybody help it?
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
Your Next Dog May Live Longer
A new pill could soon extend dogs’ lives. How will that change our relationship with our pets?
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
Hey Chat, Make Me a Fake ID
OpenAI made the perfect tool for scammers.
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
Trump’s Ballroom Sounds More and More Like a Fortress
Trump’s ballroom would contort a design that is supposed to emphasize democracy and openness.
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
Can AI Find You Love?
People are tired of swiping on dating apps. Is an AI matchmaker the answer?
The Atlantic
May 2, 2026
A Requiem for the Voting Rights Act
America’s brief era of protecting universal suffrage is over.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Congress Can’t Meet Its Own Iran-War Deadline
As the war reaches its 60th day, lawmakers appear unwilling or unable to do anything.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Atlantic Reads: ‘How to Be a Dissident,’ by Gal Beckerman
The Atlantic staff writer Gal Beckerman and podcast host Adam Harris discuss Beckerman’s new book, How to Be a Dissident.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Some Other Fun Family Movies Like Animal Farm
There are many more animated children’s films to be made based on dystopian source material.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
The Books Briefing: An Unexpected Type of Beach Read
Take pleasure in the mismatch between dangerous tales and leisurely environs.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Did a Human Write This?
The tool that knows if you used ChatGPT
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
The Psychiatrist’s Case for Downsizing a Friendship
A new book on attachment theory proposes a radical solution for the anxious among us.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
The Real Reason Iran Hasn’t Struck a Deal
The standoff isn’t about hard-liners blocking pragmatists inside Iran, but about both sides believing that they have won the war.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Photos of the Week: Screeching Championship, Direct Democracy, Victory Plunge
Parkour practice in the mountains of Afghanistan, an Anzac Day parade in Australia, a lunar-landing art project in Northern Ireland, corgi r...
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, May 1, 2026: World Records
Set this past Sunday by the Kenyan Sabastian Sawe, the world record for what event is one hour, 59 minutes, and 30 seconds?
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
Maybe AI Isn't a Bubble After All
Thanks to the rise of Claude Code and other AI agents, revenues are finally catching up to the hype.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
The ‘Infighting’ in Tehran Has Been Greatly Exaggerated
Yes, Iran has factions, but diplomacy has the backing of many of them.
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
The Mysterious Obsession With Obama’s Fake Son
Would he look like Trayvon Martin?
The Atlantic
May 1, 2026
The Secret to Success Is ‘Monotasking’
In a world full of distractions, getting your brain to focus on one thing at a time requires radical measures.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
The Trump Administration Casts Out the ‘Soul’ of MAHA
The withdrawal of Casey Means’s nomination for surgeon general is the latest blow to the movement.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
Vance Denies and Confirms Atlantic Reporting in One Breath
The vice president’s comments on Fox News are the latest instance of his tortured attempts to navigate a path through Donald Trump’s war in...
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
Seven Books That Will Take You on an Adventure
These titles will spirit you to some of the planet’s wildest landscapes, without making you leave your armchair.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
How Big Is the American Dream House?
It’s smaller than you think.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
The Iran War’s Ramifications Have Only Just Begun
U.S. goals haven’t been met but the war will cause long-term disruptions.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
Lonely China
Young urbanites are learning the costs of prosperity.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
The ‘Great Man’ Presidency
Is Donald Trump reading Hegel?
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
Cole Allen Is Another Normie Extremist
What the alleged Washington hotel attacker has in common with Luigi Mangione
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
The Secret Weapon Against AI Dominance
The future of creative labor will turn on whether AI-generated work can be copyrighted.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
Child Care Is Buckling
The president’s broad policies are making a bad situation worse.
The Atlantic
April 30, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, April 30, 2026: ‘Great Men’ and Cataclysmic Events
In his writing, the philosopher Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel named most frequently three people as “world-historical individuals”: Alexande...- 1
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