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    • Reuters

      Preparing for the Collapse of the Saudi Kingdom

      It can’t last. The U.S. better get ready.

      • Sarah Chayes and Alex de Waal
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • More Top Stories
    • Chuck Redden / Flickr
      More Top Stories

      Talking Immigration, South of the Border

      What do patrons at South Carolina’s favorite Mexican-themed tourist trap think about border security and undocumented workers?

      • David A. Graham
      • 9:23 AM ET
    • David Mdzinarishvili / Reuters
      More Top Stories

      Skinny People Don’t Diet

      Why people who have been thin their entire lives don’t do the one thing most associated with weight consciousness

      • Olga Khazan
      • 8:00 AM ET
    • Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP
      More Top Stories

      What Makes Nevada’s Caucuses Distinctive?

      The most recent addition to the roster of early voting states is establishing its own electoral identity.

      • Nora Kelly
      • 8:00 AM ET
    • Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP
      More Top Stories

      When Low-Income Parents Go Back to School

      Earning a GED can have financial benefits for parents who didn’t graduate—and make it more likely that their children will get a diploma.

      • Leah Askarinam
      • 11:36 AM ET
    • Carolyn Kaster / AP
      More Top Stories

      Is Law Enforcement Crying Wolf About the Dangers of Locked Phones?

      The examples put forward by FBI Director James Comey and his defenders are underwhelming.

      • Conor Friedersdorf
      • 10:24 AM ET
    • Olga Pedan / Shutterstock
      More Top Stories

      How Humans Became Carnivores

      Our earliest ancestors subsisted on plants, seeds, and nuts. What spurred them to start eating meat?

      • Marta Zaraska
      • 8:00 AM ET
    • John Locher / AP
      More Top Stories

      The Gadfly and the Grinder

      Once upon a time, Hillary Clinton was in a race against a passionate ideologue named Bernie Sanders. Her victory depended not on changing, but on being herself—someone who gets things done.

      • Eric Liu
      • 6:00 AM ET
    • Brian Snyder / Reuters
      More Top Stories

      Psychology’s Replication Crisis Has a Silver Lining

      It’s an opportunity for the field to lead.

      • Paul Bloom
      • 9:00 AM ET
  • Notes
    First thoughts, running arguments, stories in progress

    • Chelsea Beck

      Eleven Signs a City Will Succeed, Cont'd

      • Chris Bodenner
      • 11:20 AM ET
    • Rob Carr / AP

      This Just In: Harper Lee Has Died

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • 10:53 AM ET
    • America From the Air: JFK, Rockaway ...

      • Chris Bodenner
      • 9:45 AM ET
    • What We're Following This Morning

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • 6:00 AM ET
    • Eric Risberg / AP

      Quoted

      • Rosa Smith
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • What We're Following This Evening

      • Marina Koren
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • Global
    • Mohamed Ben Khalifa / AP
      Global

      A U.S. Strike Against an ISIS Target in Libya

      The strike reportedly targeted a militant who masterminded two major attacks in Tunisia last year.

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • 8:57 AM ET
    • Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters
      Global

      Can the Welfare State Survive the Refugee Crisis?

      The economics—and morality—of admitting immigrants

      • Heather Horn
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Reuters
      Global

      An Old-New Lech Walesa Scandal

      New documents reignite old claims that Poland’s former president and the founder of its anti-Communist Solidarity movement was a paid Communist informant.

      • Adam Chandler
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Tsering Topgyal / AP
      Global

      The Angry Debate Over Sedition in India

      The controversy surrounding the arrest of a student leader over his alleged remarks come down to this question: Do free-speech rights extend to unpopular views?

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Stringer / Reuters
      Global

      The Cuban Immigration Exception

      A Cold War-era law and the recent thawing of Cuban-American relations has led to a rise in immigration.

      • J. Weston Phippen
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Reuters
      Global

      The Political Aftermath of Ankara’s Terrorist Attack

      Turkey has blamed a U.S.-allied Syrian Kurdish group for a deadly explosion in the capital.

      • Marina Koren
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • James Akena / Reuters
      Global

      Social-Media Shutdown in Uganda’s Presidential Election

      Ugandans voted Thursday in a process that is already being called fraudulent.

      • Nshira Turkson
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

      The Great Republican Stalemate

      With the candidates flinging insults as Saturday’s South Carolina primary approaches, can anybody hope to win?

      • Molly Ball
      • 10:10 AM ET
    • What We’re Following

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • 6:00 AM ET
    • Reuters / Ali Hashisho

      Twitter’s Account Suspensions Are Surprisingly Effective Against ISIS

      Frequent pruning has hobbled terrorists’ ability to get their message out.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • 8:00 AM ET
    • Brendan McDermid / Reuters

      What Breaking Up the Banks Wouldn’t Fix

      The banks are too big to fail. They're also too broken to perform their basic job well.

      • Chris Arnade
      • 7:00 AM ET
    • Murad Sezer / Reuters

      Hearing the Lost Sounds of Antiquity

      What started as a quest to map the sophisticated acoustics of ancient churches could end up preserving and replicating forgotten noises from across the planet.

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • 10:43 AM ET
    • AP

      Remembering Harper Lee

      The iconic American author of To Kill a Mockingbird died a few months shy of her 90th birthday.

      • Adam Chandler
      • 11:29 AM ET
    • Video: The Most Powerful Space Telescope Ever

      A behind-the-scenes look at the NASA telescope that will search for signs of life on distant planets​

      • Ross Andersen, Sam Price-Waldman, and Greyson Korhonen
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • Video
    • Video

      The Strange New Vocabulary of Korean Factory Workers

      The nation's industrial expansion in the 1970s and 80’s gave rise to new linguistic developments.

      • Nadine Ajaka
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • Video

      Inside the Effort to Build Hyperloop

      ​Making Elon Musk’s infrastructure dream a reality

      • Greyson Korhonen
      • Feb 10, 2016
    • Video

      Manufacturing Returns to Columbus, MS

      How does a small town that loses its main industry recover and move forward?

      • Nicolas Pollock
      • Feb 8, 2016
    • Elier Cabrera / Range Video / The Atlantic
      Video

      Is Miami Beach Doomed?

      The city could be underwater within the century—but it has a plan.

      • Sam Price-Waldman
      • Feb 8, 2016
    • Video

      What Can We Learn From Early Election Results?

      Analyzing the Sanders, Cruz, and Clinton campaigns

      • Daniel Lombroso, Greyson Korhonen, and Catherine Green
      • Feb 16, 2016
    • Video

      An Artist Asks: Whose Business Is Our DNA?

      Heather Dewey-Hagborg’s newest project raises questions about who has access to our personal data.

      • Nadine Ajaka
      • Feb 11, 2016
  • Most Popular

    • The Great Republican Stalemate

      With the candidates flinging insults as Saturday’s South Carolina primary approaches, can anybody hope to win?

      • Molly Ball
      • 10:10 AM ET
    • Inside the Artificial Universe That Creates Itself

      A team of programmers has built a self-generating cosmos, and even they don’t know what’s hiding in its vast reaches.

      • Roc Morin
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Skinny People Rarely Diet

      Why people who have been thin their entire lives don’t do the one thing most associated with weight consciousness

      • Olga Khazan
      • 8:00 AM ET
    • The Life of Pablo and the Terror of Monogamy

      Kanye West's seventh album makes married life sound anything but blissful.

      • Spencer Kornhaber
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Preparing for the Collapse of the Saudi Kingdom

      It can’t last. The U.S. better get ready.

      • Sarah Chayes and Alex de Waal
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • Politics & Policy
    • Alex Brandon / AP
      Politics & Policy

      The Muddled Future of Reproductive Rights

      Justice Scalia’s death throws cases pending before the Supreme Court on abortion and contraception into doubt.

      • Julie Rovner
      • 6:09 AM ET
    • The Atlantic
      Politics & Policy

      2016 Distilled

      Follow the U.S. elections with The Atlantic

      • the editors
    • Lucy Nicholson / Reuters
      Politics & Policy

      The Foreign Travels of Bernie Sanders

      The Democratic presidential contender has used his journeys abroad to shape America’s global image, and hasn’t been afraid to criticize U.S. foreign policy.

      • Clare Foran
      • 6:17 AM ET
    • Randall Hill / Reuters
      Politics & Policy

      Is This Finally It for Jeb Bush?

      The Republican lashed out on Wednesday, after Governor Nikki Haley’s endorsement went to Marco Rubio.

      • David A. Graham
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Michael B. Thomas / AFP / Getty
      Politics & Policy

      Why DeRay Mckesson Is Running for Baltimore Mayor

      An interview with the Black Lives Matter activist, who insists he’s not a politician, and says the city must work for everyone.

      • Clare Foran
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Carlos Osorio / AP
      Politics & Policy

      How to Prevent the Next Flint

      The paternalistic approach to government has run its course.

      • Ron Fournier
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Brynn Anderson / AP
      Politics & Policy

      A Poll-Tested Message for Criminal-Justice Reform

      As the Senate weighs a legislative push, new survey results from swing states shows that support for a sentencing overhaul depends on how you pitch it.

      • Russell Berman
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • Culture
    • A24
      Culture

      The Witch Mines the Quiet Terror of the Unknown

      Robert Eggers’ debut film, a smash hit at Sundance, conjures its scares from eerie atmospherics and immersive details.

      • David Sims
      • 11:24 AM ET
    • Focus Features
      Culture

      Race: An Inspiring but Muddled Biopic

      The movie, which charts Jesse Owen’s path to the 1936 Berlin Olympics, fumbles trying to tell multiple stories at once.

      • David Sims
      • 9:57 AM ET
    • Andrew Kelly / Reuters
      Culture

      The Life of Pablo and the Crack-Up of Kanye West

      His seventh album is largely about married life. It is anything but blissful.

      • Spencer Kornhaber
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Netflix
      Culture

      Netflix’s Love: A Dark Romance About Terrible People

      The new series from Judd Apatow about a troubled couple in L.A. takes a long time to pay off—but it’s worth it.

      • David Sims
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • HBO
      Culture

      Broad City and the New Norms of Marriage in American Culture

      The show’s new season asks what its heroines, Abbi and Ilana, are to each other: friends? Partners? More?

      • Megan Garber
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • ABC
      Culture

      Is Creative Television Bad for Business?

      ABC seems to think so, ousting its president after he shepherded an explosion of inclusive programming.

      • David Sims
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • The Renwick Gallery
      Culture

      Art for Instagram’s Sake

      Spectacular, immersive exhibitions are drawing huge crowds, but are they changing the museum experience?

      • Katharine Schwab
      • Feb 17, 2016
  • Today's Newsletter
    • Max Rossi / Reuters
      Today's Newsletter

      Subscribe to Our Afternoon Newsletter

      The Atlantic Daily: our wrap-up of notable news, ideas, and images—by email each weekday

    Get The Atlantic Daily delivered to your inbox.

  • Projects

    Next America

    • Emily Jan / The Atlantic

      A ‘Con’ For Everyone

      At Katsucon, anime, fantasy and real-life identities help everyone fit right in.

      • Emily Jan
      • 8:00 AM ET
    • Warren Richardson

      Winners of the 2016 World Press Photo Contest

      The winning entries of the 59th annual World Press Photo Contest ​have just been announced.

      • Alan Taylor
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • Science
    • Brendan Monroe / Quanta Magazine
      Science

      How Scientists Are Reimagining the Origin of Life

      How scientists are reimagining the environment that gave rise to life

      • Emily Singer
      • 8:30 AM ET
    • Helen King / Corbis
      Science

      In 2050, Half the World Will Be Nearsighted

      Researchers expect eyesight to worsen across the globe thanks to more screens and less time outdoors.

      • Julie Beck
      • 9:00 AM ET
    • Eric Risberg / AP
      Science

      The Hottest January in History

      And other news from the Earth system

      • Robinson Meyer
      • 8:30 AM ET
    • Mike Hutchings / Reuters
      Science

      How Microbes Make Malnutrition Worse

      And how they can be marshaled to fight it

      • Ed Yong
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Bettman / Corbis
      Science

      What UFOs Mean for Why People Don’t Trust Science

      The history of ufology shows the complex psychology of fringe beliefs.

      • Julie Beck
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • David Gray / Reuters
      Science

      A New Way to Understand the World’s Rarest Minerals

      Two geologists have developed a system for classifying some of the most elusive substances on the planet.

      • Alex Berezow
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • Carlo Allegri / Reuters
      Science

      An Instagram for Pond Scum

      An account called Pondlife offers a visually stunning account of the microscopic organisms that live in bodies of water.

      • Doug Bierend
      • Feb 17, 2016
  • Technology
    • Jacob Silberberg / Reuters
      Technology

      Alphabet, Jigsaw, and the Puzzle of Google’s New Brand

      What happens when a company wants to be cute and all-powerful at the same time?

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Eduardo Munoz / Reuters
      Technology

      The Conscription of Apple’s Software Engineers

      The FBI wants to force tech workers to write code that they believe to be unethical and harmful to their country.

      • Conor Friedersdorf
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • No Man's Sky
      Technology

      Inside the Artificial Universe That Creates Itself

      A team of programmers has built a self-generating cosmos, and even they don’t know what’s hiding in its vast reaches.

      • Roc Morin
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Joshua Roberts / Reuters
      Technology

      The Supreme Court Didn’t Block These Obama Climate Policies

      Even without the Clean Power Plan, dozens of White House environmental regulations are still shifting energy use.

      • Robinson Meyer
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Reuters
      Technology

      A Hospital Paralyzed by Hackers

      A cyberattack in Los Angeles has left doctors locked out of patient records for more than a week. Unless the medical facility pays a ransom, it’s unclear that they'll get that information back.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • The Atlantic
      Technology

      Escaping the Amish for a Connected World

      What it’s like to adapt to texting and online dating after a life without electricity

      • Olga Khazan
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • Robert Galbraith / Reuters
      Technology

      The Optics of Apple’s Encryption Fight

      The government asked the company to hack into a terrorist’s iPhone. Tim Cook’s promise to fight back could solidify his role as a privacy leader—or make him look soft on terrorism.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • Feb 17, 2016
  • Business
    • Joe Chan / Reuters
      Business

      How the Idea of a ‘Normal’ Person Got Invented

      The notion that there is a "normal" height or a "normal" salary is a relatively new one, and it's had a profound effect on how people think.

      • Todd Rose
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Evan Barnes / Reuters
      Business

      Is Britain No Longer a Nation of Tea Drinkers?

      According to new data, the stereotypical national obsession with the drink is much less steeped in reality than it used to be.

      • Adam Chandler
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Dado Ruvic / Reuters
      Business

      Twitter Is Not a Failure

      And the fact that it’s collapsing in Wall Street’s estimation only reveals the utter perversion of the digital economy.

      • Douglas Rushkoff
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Brad Gunkel / New Avenue Homes
      Business

      Little Homes in Big Backyards: San Francisco’s Housing Solution?

      Bay Area cities are loosening restrictions on so-called accessory dwelling units, which homeowners can build in their basements, attics, or out on their lawns.

      • Alana Semuels
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Soe Zeya Tun / Reuters
      Business

      The Media’s Gender-Bias Problem

      In 2013, I found that, over the course of a year, about 25 percent of the people I quoted or mentioned were women. Two years later, a similar analysis yielded discouraging results.

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • Richard Vogel / AP
      Business

      The New American Dream: A Rental of One’s Own

      Homeownership is down and leasing is up, the result of the realities of today’s economy.

      • Richard Florida
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • The Atlantic
      Business

      Finding Jesus at Work

      Why are more and more companies offering access to chaplains as an employee benefit?

      • Emma Green
      • Feb 17, 2016
  • Health
    • Wikimedia
      Health

      A New Skeleton and an Old Debate About Syphilis

      The recent discovery of ancient remains with signs of the disease shows how mysterious its origins are.  

      • Cari Romm
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Pep Boatella / Spectrum
      Health

      Is There a Link Between Autism and Anorexia?

      Researchers have begun to understand what the two conditions have in common.

      • Carrie Arnold
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • Steve Nesius / Reuters
      Health

      Why Depression Screenings Should Be Part of Routine Check-Ups

      New guidelines make mental health a higher priority in primary care.

      • Farah Khan
      • Feb 16, 2016
    • Dylan Martinez / Reuters
      Health

      Anti-Vaxers Aren’t Stupid

      Doctors, pharmaceutical companies, and the government have a lot of power over children's lives. That can make parents act irrationally.

      • Emma Green
      • Feb 16, 2016
    • Stephen Lam / Reuters
      Health

      What Dying Looks Like in America’s Prisons

      In many places, inmates who want to go into hospice care have to sign a do-not-resuscitate order first.

      • Ann Neumann
      • Feb 16, 2016
    • Tim Vecchi / Corbis
      Health

      A First-Aid Class for Mental Health

      Most people know how to help someone with a cut or a scrape. But what about a panic attack?

      • Meagan Morris
      • Feb 12, 2016
    • Dutch Boy Paints
      Health

      An American History of Lead Poisoning

      Flint is the latest outbreak in the country’s longest-running child-health epidemic.

      • Laura Bliss
      • Feb 12, 2016
  • Education
    • John Locher / AP
      Education

      What If America’s Teachers Made More Money?

      A number of states want to raise their salaries, but it’s unclear whether that will do much for schools’ staffing problems.

      • Alia Wong
      • Feb 18, 2016
    • University of Hawaii / Flickr
      Education

      The Elusive Goal of On-Time Graduation

      A surprisingly tiny minority of U.S. college students actually get their four-year degrees in four years.

      • Jon Marcus
      • Feb 17, 2016
    • Wilfredo Lee / AP
      Education

      The Promise of Integrated Schools

      New research shows more districts opting for diverse schools, as others face resistance.

      • Melinda D. Anderson
      • Feb 16, 2016
    • Jae C. Hong / AP
      Education

      The Stress of Paying for College

      The latest survey of U.S. college freshmen shows that those who receive Pell grants are concerned about how to finance their education—but affluent students are worried, too.

      • Mikhail Zinshteyn
      • Feb 16, 2016
    • Shannon Stapleton / Reuters
      Education

      Why Elite-College Admissions Need an Overhaul

      “Schools need to instill in students a thirst to pursue their interests, even at the expense of creating the ‘well-rounded’ student.”

      • Jonathan R. Cole
      • Feb 14, 2016
    • Aly Song / Reuters
      Education

      Educating an Original Thinker

      How teachers and parents can identify and cultivate children who think creatively and unconventionally

      • Jessica Lahey
      • Feb 12, 2016
    • Jason Lee / Reuters
      Education

      The Power of Thinking Like a Preschooler

      Adults often have trouble understanding young children’s needs and inner lives—but paying closer attention to the way they experience the world can be valuable.

      • Lauren Cassani Davis
      • Feb 11, 2016
  • In This Issue
    • Adam Voorhes
      In This Issue

      How America Is Putting Itself Back Together

      Most people in the U.S. believe their country is going to hell. But they’re wrong. What a three-year journey by single-engine plane reveals about reinvention and renewal.

      • James Fallows
      • Feb 8, 2016
    • Doug Chayka
      In This Issue

      A. O. Scott, Critic Without a Cause

      The New York Times film writer has a take on everything but says nothing.

      • Leon Wieseltier
      • Feb 8, 2016
    • Sitthixay Ditthavong / AP

      When Parents and Surrogates Disagree on Abortion

      “The law doesn’t anticipate these kinds of Sophie’s Choice-type questions that people have to make once they’re creating babies in petri dishes.”

      • Katie O'Reilly
      • Feb 18, 2016
  • Video
    • Video

      A Lost Album of the Disco Era, Rediscovered

      The revival of a visionary band from the 70s and 80s

      • Greyson Korhonen
      • Feb 9, 2016
    • Video

      Meet the Guerrilla Fighters of Kurdistan

      An in-depth look at the war against ISIS in Iraq and Syria

      • Daniel Lombroso
      • Feb 10, 2016
More Stories

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