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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
March 12, 2026
Trump’s War Lacks a Marketing Plan
Why does a president who loves selling not want to pitch this conflict?
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
The Police Report Complicating a White House Endorsement
A woman’s allegations of rape against a Republican House candidate in tv have put Trump in a bind.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Dubai’s Army of Influencers Gets Back in Line
After briefly playing war correspondents, their tune changed.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
The Republican Who Wants to Banish His Own Constituents
Representative Andy Ogles wrote Monday that “Muslims don’t belong in American society.” He represents thousands of them in Congress.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
The Dissonance of Anthropic's CEO, Dario Amodei
It came earlier than expected.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
The Members of Congress Openly Attacking Muslim Americans
The United States is experiencing a resurgence of the attacks on Muslims and Islam that were common at that time—but this time with a presid...
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 11, 2026: Skims and Stravinsky
As the crow flies, the shortest passage from Iran to Oman is the 35-mile crossing over what waterway?
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Winter Paralympics Photo of the Day: Curling Gold
Members of China's curling team celebrate Paralympic Gold.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Will the Iran War Be Netanyahu's Undoing?
The prime minister isn’t just fighting the Islamic Republic. He’s fighting the Israeli judiciary, his own coalition, and the clock.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Can Democrats Actually Win in Texas?
Beto O’Rourke on the Texas Democratic Senate primary and what it means for a key race in the 2026 midterms. Plus: chaos at DHS and Samuel Fl...
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
The Obvious Is Taking Its Revenge on Trump
The reasons other U.S. presidents avoided war with Iran are becoming all too evident.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Play It Again, Claude
The rise and fall of the player piano indicates a robust demand for human labor that AI cannot replace.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Why I Can’t Stand the Hype
The Pitt, Severance, Sinners, you name it: For some reason, the more popular something is, the more averse I am to consuming it.
The Atlantic
March 11, 2026
Robyn Is Still Dancing On Her Own
On her first album in seven years, the queen of poptimism reckons with motherhood and midlife desire.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
The Big Story: Signalgate, One Year Later
Jeffrey Goldberg and Adrienne LaFrance discuss reporting on national security and the political fallout from the Signal story.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
The Iranian Regime Doubles Down
Trump was hoping for an Iranian Delcy Rodríguez. Instead he may have produced an Iranian Kim Jong Un.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Arizona Is Now At the Center Of Election Investigations
Both the Department of Homeland Security and the FBI are probing the results of the 2020 election in Arizona.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Universities Have Been Steamrolling Trump in Court
The aggressive pace that won the administration so many early victories eventually proved to be its great weakness.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
The Peculiar State of Islamic Terror in America
What to make of the Gracie Mansion incident
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Trump Can’t Decide Whether the Iran War Is Still Going On
The president seems to be at odds with both himself and his secretary of defense about the status of the conflict.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Winter Paralympics Photo of the Day: Guided Speed
A visually-impaired skier races down a hill right behind his guide.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 10, 2026: It’s All Greek to Me (Unless It’s Arabic)
In the Greek-written New Testament of the Bible, the word eirene means “peace.” What equivalent exists in the language of the Old Testament?
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Spain’s Wind Towns Are Thriving
A generation ago, Higueruela was dying. Wind power offered a lifeline.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
What’s the Point of a Drop When Everything’s a Drop?
How shopping became a game of snagging mediocre, limited-run products
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Why Mahmoud Ahmadinejad Is Still Useful
For more than a decade, he has been known more as a regime opponent than as a supporter.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Inside ICE’s Detention Center for Children
Dilley was once a way station for border crossers. Now it’s where families are sent after ICE roundups.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Winners of the British Wildlife Photography Awards 2026
A collection of this year’s winners and runners-up, selected from more than 12,000 entries
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
Six Books You’ll Have to Discuss With a Friend
These titles are exciting and stimulating enough to talk about with almost anyone.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
The Reason the Administration Won’t Say War
Trump’s administration has both used and avoided the word war in ways that seek glory and evade responsibility.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
AI Layoffs Are a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
The technology may not be ready to replace workers, but that isn’t stopping execs from pushing forward anyways.
The Atlantic
March 10, 2026
The Weather-Changing Conspiracy Theory That Will Never End
Why are some people convinced that nefarious experiments are happening in the distant Alaskan wilderness?
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
The Unaddressed Problem With the Pentagon’s AI Dispute
Who will take responsibility for the technology?
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
A Dramatic 24 Hours for Oil Prices
Americans will bear the costs of a potential energy shock in the Middle East.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
Atlantic Trivia, March 9, 2026: Movies and the Middle Ages
Test your knowledge—and read our latest stories for a little extra help.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
Winter Paralympics Photo of the Day: Sled Hockey
A para ice-hockey player maneuvers with the puck.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
I Believe California Has a Right to Exist
Gavin Newsom also has a right to exist.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
Who Gets to Claim the Kennedys?
Love Story deeply empathizes with John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette—but this doesn’t make the show any less exploitative.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
The Pentagon Cut Civilian Safeguards Before Iran War
As the civilian toll in Iran mounts, some officials point to the impact of Pete Hegseth’s hostility to battlefield restraint.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
A New and Confusing Study About Acetaminophen and Autism
Researchers in Taiwan tried to examine whether using the drug during pregnancy leaves children at greater risk of neurological disorders. Th...
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
How 'Christian Nationalist' Became an Epithet
Throughout American history, Christian nationalisms have bent in different and often contradictory directions.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
Books Are Meant to Be Slow
The erosion of deep reading weakens our capacity to grasp complex ideas.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
The Cynical, Gullible American Man
This is why we live in a world of conspiracism and falsehood.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
The Asymmetric Ways Iran Could Strike Back
The regime is overmatched militarily, but still has tools for returning fire.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
The Power of Homeownership in New York
Zohran Mamdani’s leftist allies malign it. But it has changed lives in the city and transformed neighborhoods.
The Atlantic
March 9, 2026
The Unbearable Lightness of Signalgate
Nearly a year after a national-security scandal erupted on my iPhone, no one in the Trump administration has faced consequences.
The Atlantic
March 8, 2026
Winter Paralympics Photo of the Day: Para Biathlon
A seated skier tucks low, picking up speed.
The Atlantic
March 8, 2026
The 'SNL' Sketch That Broke All the Rules
Last night, the show made the host, Ryan Gosling, break character—on purpose.
The Atlantic
March 8, 2026
Six Bizarre Movies That Are Actually Fun to Watch
Weird wins you over in these films.
The Atlantic
March 8, 2026
The Household Names Hollywood Has Been Seeking
Auteur filmmakers have become as much of a selling point as the actors they work with.
The Atlantic
March 8, 2026
A Word for Our Troubled Times
Too many people are living fragmented lives.- 1
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