In February 2015, Julie Beck wrote about what is lost when websites change or disappear.
The year you were born, Jack Miles wrote about economic tensions between Latinos and African Americans highlighted by the L.A. Riots.
As Clinton's first term came to a close, Thomas Byrns Edsall wrote about his singular instinct for adaptation.
Jason Redmond / AP
The conflicts and displacements touched off around the world by the attacks have been reverberating for the majority of your life. “This ‘war’ [on terrorism] will never be over,” wrote James Fallows, a few years after the towers fell.
In May 2012, Stephen Marche wrote about how Facebook and other social-media platforms were making people lonely, even as they connected them to others more than ever before.
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Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants was released in 2005.
Goran Tomasevic / Reuters
When 26-year-old Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire, he ignited a tinderbox of protests that continue to roil the Middle East, and kindled the beginnings of democracy in Tunisia.
In September 2011, Rebecca Rosen wrote about the role of social media in the Arab Spring.
Danny Moloshok / Reuters
In March 2013, Richard Lawson wrote about the presence of Disney stars in a comedic crime thriller.
In December 2014, Adrienne LaFrance wrote about how the way we see privacy will change over the next decade.
The Atlantic is here to help you process it, in stories like these: