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    • Reuters

      The Changing of the Global Economic Guard

      China has profited immensely from the open global trading system. But whether it remains open depends on the actions of the West’s increasingly reactive democracies.

      • Edward Luce
      • Apr 29, 2017
  • More Top Stories
    • Library of Congress
      More Top Stories

      Why There Was a Civil War

      Some issues aren’t amenable to deal-making; some principles don’t lend themselves to compromise.

      • Yoni Appelbaum
      • May 1, 2017
    • KCNA / Reuters
      More Top Stories

      Who's Really in Charge of the United States Government?

      The administration’s flip-flopping on North Korea is only the latest incident to raise this question.

      • David Frum
      • May 1, 2017
    • Alex Brandon / AP
      More Top Stories

      Trump’s Peculiar Understanding of the Civil War

      The president’s admiration for deal-making and strong leadership lead him to suggest that Andrew Jackson could have stopped the Civil War.

      • David A. Graham
      • May 1, 2017
    • HBO
      More Top Stories

      What Sets the Satire of Veep Apart

      The executive producer and New York writer-at-large discusses the many parallels between the HBO show and real life.

      • Sophie Gilbert
      • May 1, 2017
    • Zak Bickel / The Atlantic
      More Top Stories

      Inside New York’s Snarkiest and Rapidly Aging Online Community

      Members of Echo, an old-fashioned web forum, have been sneering together long enough to make it into retirement.

      • Sandra Newman
      • May 1, 2017
    • Andy McMillan
      More Top Stories

      The Path to Higher Education With an Intellectual Disability

      The number of degree-granting institutions with options for these students is growing.

      • Hayley Glatter
      • May 1, 2017
    • Neil Hall / Reuters
      More Top Stories

      The Fear of Feelings at Work

      The psychologist Susan David argues that the idea that employees should only display positive emotions at work often results in organizational failures.

      • Bourree Lam
      • May 1, 2017
    • Alex Wong / Getty
      More Top Stories

      What Sebastian Gorka Got Right About 'Radical Islam'

      The White House counterterrorism adviser is so misguided in so many ways that some are reluctant to acknowledge when he has a point.

      • Graeme Wood
      • May 1, 2017
  • Video
    • Video

      Preserving Biodiversity to Feed the World

      A botanical explorer collects seeds from plants threatened by mechanized agribusiness.

      • Erica Moriarty
      • Apr 26, 2017
    • Video

      One Man's Fight to Bury His Wife With Dignity

      In a short film, a husband ends up in a legal battle over his wife’s final wishes to be buried in the front yard.

      • Erica Moriarty
      • Apr 19, 2017
    • Video

      Inside a Democrat's Remarkable Campaign in a Deep-Red District

      Republicans have held Georgia's sixth district for nearly 40 years, but Jon Ossoff could change that. We go inside his record-breaking campaign.

      • Daniel Lombroso
      • Apr 16, 2017
    • Video

      The Visa Uncertainty Holding Back Star Scientists

      An Indian Ph.D. graduate is working on lifesaving heart research. Will she be able to stay to complete it?

      • The Editors
      • Apr 18, 2017
    • Video

      The Surge of Refugees Fleeing the U.S. for Canada Ignites Debate

      Hundreds of asylum seekers have illegally crossed the border into Emerson, Manitoba, dividing the small town.

      • Nicolas Pollock
      • Apr 17, 2017
    • Video

      Will the 'Trump Effect' Sweep Europe?

      The new American president emboldened far-right populists who are spooking Europe’s political establishment.

      • Leah Varjacques and Krishnadev Calamur
      • Apr 14, 2017
    • Tobias Schwarz / Reuters

      Why the Phrase 'Late Capitalism' Is Suddenly Everywhere

      An investigation into a term that seems to perfectly capture the indignities and absurdities of the modern economy.

      • Annie Lowrey
      • May 1, 2017
    • Carlo Allegri / Reuters

      Is Trump's Campaign Act Wearing Thin?

      The more his presidency stalls, the more he turns to his old tricks. But there are signs those worn tactics are losing their power.

      • David A. Graham
      • May 1, 2017
    • Lucas Jackson / Reuters

      Another Senior Fox News Employee Is Out

      Co-President Bill Shine has resigned amid accusations he concealed Roger Ailes’s unseemly behavior.

      • Aria Bendix
      • May 1, 2017
    • Saul Loeb / Getty Images

      Congress Totally Ignored Trump's Cuts to NIH Funding

      The president has proposed slicing billions of dollars from the premier research agency. Even his allies on the Hill are proposing billions in additional spending.

      • Nora Kelly
      • May 1, 2017
    • Hulu

      The Handmaid's Tale Treats Guilt as an Epidemic

      The Hulu show, like the book before it, is deeply concerned with matters of complicity—and it arrives in a culture that is deeply anxious about them, as well.

      • Megan Garber
      • May 1, 2017
    • Mike Blake / Reuters

      ESPN Is Not Doomed

      But the network’s recent layoffs are a preview of major shifts to come in the television industry, American sports, and all of digital media.

      • Derek Thompson
      • May 1, 2017
    • Video: Why Launching a War Against North Korea Would Be Immoral

      Peter Beinart argues that preventive war is betrayal of American principles

      • Daniel Lombroso and Peter Beinart
      • Apr 28, 2017
  • Features
    • The Atlantic
      Features

      How Two Mississippi College Students Fell in Love and Decided to Join ISIS

      In three short months, Jaelyn Young and Muhammad Dakhlalla found themselves at the center of America’s debate over radicalization

      • Emma Green
      • May 1, 2017
    • Rob Dobi
      Features

      Atlanta's Controversial 'Cityhood' Movement  

      Recent border battles have once again redrawn the lines of the metro area.

      • Sam Rosen
      • Apr 26, 2017
  • Politics & Policy
    • Carlos Barria / Reuters
      Politics & Policy

      A Bipartisan Spending Deal That Shortchanges Trump

      Congress is giving the new president a boost in funding for the military and a little extra for border security, but that’s about it.

      • Russell Berman
      • May 1, 2017
    • Carlo Allegri / Reuters
      Politics & Policy

      The Entertainment Presidency

      Trump hasn’t accomplished much in policy terms in his first 100 days. But he’s had a huge impact on politics and culture.

      • Rosie Gray
      • Apr 30, 2017
    • Romeo Ranoco / Reuters
      Politics & Policy

      Trump Invites Duterte to the White House

      The Philippine president has encouraged thousands of extrajudicial killings, even bragged about murdering three men himself.

      • J. Weston Phippen
      • Apr 30, 2017
    • J. Scott Applewhite / AP
      Politics & Policy

      Why Do So Many Americans Think Democrats Are Out of Touch?

      The party appears to be struggling to convince the public it represents a better alternative to President Trump and the GOP.

      • Clare Foran
      • Apr 29, 2017
    • Zak Bickel / The Atlantic
      Politics & Policy

      The Promises Trump Has Kept—and Broken

      As the president marks 100 days in office, a comprehensive review of his progress toward fulfilling the pledges he made on the trail

      • David A. Graham
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • The Atlantic
      Politics & Policy

      The Trump Administration: The First 100 Days

      • the editors
    • Yuri Gripas / Reuters
      Politics & Policy

      Trump's Presidential Status Anxiety

      As the president nears his hundredth day in office, he seems increasingly concerned about how he’ll measure up.

      • McKay Coppins
      • Apr 28, 2017
  • Most Popular

    • Why the Phrase 'Late Capitalism' Is Suddenly Everywhere

      An investigation into a term that seems to perfectly capture the indignities and absurdities of the modern economy

      • Annie Lowrey
      • May 1, 2017
    • Is Trump's Campaign Act Wearing Thin?

      The more his presidency stalls, the more he turns to his old tricks. But there are signs those worn tactics are losing their power.

      • David A. Graham
      • May 1, 2017
    • Why There Was a Civil War

      Some issues aren’t amenable to deal-making; some principles don’t lend themselves to compromise.

      • Yoni Appelbaum
      • May 1, 2017
    • How Two Mississippi College Students Fell in Love and Decided to Join a Terrorist Group

      In three short months, Jaelyn Young and Muhammad Dakhlalla found themselves at the center of America’s debate over radicalization.

      • Emma Green
      • May 1, 2017
    • Who's Really in Charge of the United States Government?

      The administration’s flip-flopping on North Korea is only the latest incident to raise this question.

      • David Frum
      • May 1, 2017
  • Business
    • Bettmann / Getty
      Business

      Where Have All the Black-Owned Businesses Gone?

      They once served their communities when others wouldn't, and over the past 30 years, they've practically vanished.

      • Brian S. Feldman
      • May 1, 2017
    • Muhammed Muheisen / AP
      Business

      The Best Business Reads of April

      The month’s most interesting stories about money and economics from around the web

      • Gillian B. White
      • May 1, 2017
    • Jessica Rinaldi / Reuters
      Business

      Is Donald Trump’s Presidency Hurting His Businesses?

      His polarizing first 100 days in office appear to be driving potential customers away from his companies.

      • Jeremy Venook
      • Apr 29, 2017
    • Zach Gibson / AP
      Business

      Ro Khanna Wants to Give Working-Class Households $1 Trillion

      Silicon Valley’s new member of Congress has some big ideas for combatting wage stagnation.

      • Annie Lowrey
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Gabriela Riccardi / The Atlantic
      Business

      Sheryl Sandberg's Advice for Grieving

      The Facebook COO opens up about what she’s learned since the sudden death of her husband in 2015.

      • Rebecca J. Rosen
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Richard Carson / Wells Fargo
      Business

      A Lawsuit Claims Wells Fargo Targeted Undocumented Immigrants to Hit Sales Quotas

      It is the latest in a string of allegations following the bank's fake-account scandal.

      • Gillian B. White
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Aaron Bernstein / Reuters
      Business

      A Comprehensive Guide to Donald Trump’s Tax Proposal

      Who wins (the rich), who loses (anybody who doesn’t like deficits), and why it might take a miracle for the plan to become a law

      • Derek Thompson
      • Apr 26, 2017
  • Global
    • Global

      Trump Would Meet Kim Jong Un 'Under Right Circumstances'

      The president’s remarks to Bloomberg News raise questions about his North Korea policy.

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • May 1, 2017
    • Carlos Garcia Rawlins / Reuters
      Global

      The Opposition's Way Forward in Venezuela

      There is momentum to oust President Nicolás Maduro, but how that will happen is unclear.

      • J. Weston Phippen
      • May 1, 2017
    • Christian Hartmann / Reuters
      Global

      What the French Election Might Have Looked Like in America

      The “populist wave” crashes on each country differently.

      • Uri Friedman
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Reuters
      Global

      North Korea's Latest Provocation

      An apparently failed missile launch comes just days after the U.S. deployed a missile-defense system to the Korean peninsula.

      • J. Weston Phippen
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Ognen Teofilovski / Reuters
      Global

      What Happened in Macedonia, and Why

      A new flare-up in a troubled democracy

      • Valerie Hopkins
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Mladen Antonov / AFP/ Getty
      Global

      Taboo Tattoos in Osaka and Ex-Guerrillas in Colombia: The Week in Global-Affairs Writing

      The highlights from seven days of reading about the world

      • Anna Diamond
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Carlos Barria / Reuters
      Global

      'There Is a Chance That We Could End Up Having a Major, Major Conflict With North Korea'

      President Trump, in an interview with Reuters, also said while he would “love to solve things diplomatically … it’s very difficult.”

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Katie Martin / The Atlantic

      Life Timeline

      Tell us your birthday, and we’ll show you how the world has changed since you were born.

    • The Atlantic

      How Is Your Life Situated in History?

      You’ve already lived through enough to fill history books. Consider this a sneak preview of what those books might say.

    • Explore the Life of a 101-Year-Old

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    • More
  • Technology
    • Jeff Chiu / AP
      Technology

      The Internet of Things Needs a Code of Ethics

      Technology is evolving faster than the legal and moral frameworks needed to manage it.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • May 1, 2017
    • Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters
      Technology

      Porn Star James Deen's Crisis of Conscience

      The most famous male adult film actor—and porn website proprietor—of his generation frets that his industry doesn’t protect children from exposure to hardcore content on the internet.

      • Conor Friedersdorf
      • May 1, 2017
    • Ekaterina Shtukina / RIA Novosti / Reuters
      Technology

      Facebook Data ‘Does Not Contradict’ Intelligence on Russia Meddling

      The social platform says it has a problem with government-run efforts to manipulate public opinion.

      • Adrienne LaFrance
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Helen King / Getty
      Technology

      Hackers Get Back to the Basics

      As the costs of complex cyberattacks increase, old-school email tricks are coming back in style.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Reuters
      Technology

      Why Fruit Has a Fake Wax Coating

      For centuries, artificial protective coatings have preserved and protected foods—and made them look more appealing. An Object Lesson.

      • Julia Phillips
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Shizuo Kambayashi / AP
      Technology

      The (Sometimes Unintentional) Subtext of Digital Conversations

      Different people have different ideas about what it means to sign an email “XOXO,” what you should use Facebook for, and how long you can wait before texting back.

      • Deborah Tannen
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Fjola Dogg Thorvalds / Getty
      Technology

      A Trick That Hides Censored Websites Inside Cat Videos

      The technique uses popular sites as camouflage for banned ones.

      • Kaveh Waddell
      • Apr 26, 2017
  • Today's Newsletter
    • Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
      Today's Newsletter

      The Atlantic Daily: Dealing With Deal-Makers

      Congress’s bipartisan budget proposal,Trump’s Civil War gaffe, the radicalization of two college students, and more

      • Rosa Inocencio Smith
      • May 1, 2017

    Get The Atlantic Daily delivered to your inbox.

  • Health
    • Reed Saxon / AP
      Health

      Yoga Classes Should Be Shorter

      The light in me honors the light in you, but it is also extremely busy.

      • Olga Khazan
      • May 1, 2017
    • Kai Pfaffenbach / Reuters
      Health

      Awkwardness, Why?

      The author of a new book explains the science behind the cringeworthy feeling—and how to overcome it.

      • Olga Khazan
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Chelsea Beck
      Health

      Is My Neti Pot Going to Kill Me?

      Cases of brain-infecting amoebae underscore the importance of purifying water before you pour it into your sinuses.

      • Katie Heaney
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Thomas Schaller / Getty
      Health

      How Much Coffee Is Actually Safe to Drink? A New Review

      The most comprehensive review of evidence on health consequences of caffeine use has just been published.

      • James Hamblin
      • Apr 26, 2017
    • rolfo / Getty
      Health

      The Elegant Way Online Social Networks 'Heal' After a Death

      Friends of the deceased person start interacting more after a loss, and stay in touch for years afterward.

      • Julie Beck
      • Apr 26, 2017
    • Rafael Marchante / Reuters
      Health

      Why Wisdom Teeth Are So Much Trouble

      … and other evolutionary questions for an anthropologist who studies ancient teeth.

      • Sarah Zhang
      • Apr 25, 2017
    • Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
      Health

      Babies Floating in Fluid-Filled Bags

      A lab has successfully gestated premature lambs in artificial wombs. Are humans next?

      • Olga Khazan
      • Apr 25, 2017
  • Science
    • Buddhika Weerasinghe / Getty
      Science

      The Transformative Fungus That Powers Japanese Cuisine

      A single mold is behind many best-known flavors.

      • Nicola Twilley and Cynthia Graber
      • May 1, 2017
    • Miromatrix Medical
      Science

      'Big Pork' Wants to Get In on Organ Transplants

      The pork industry has always been creative about finding uses for pig byproducts.

      • Sarah Zhang
      • May 1, 2017
    • Mike Theiler / Reuters
      Science

      The Climate March's Big Tent Strategy Paid Off

      The event's impressive turnout suggests the mainstream environmental justice movement has arrived.

      • Robinson Meyer
      • Apr 30, 2017
    • Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
      Science

      Space: Trump's Least Controversial Frontier

      Unlike in other policy areas, the president can pay significant attention to the U.S. space program with little risk of backlash.

      • Marina Koren
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Netflix
      Science

      Scientists Should Just Be Political

      Only politicizing halfway doesn’t help anyone.

      • Robinson Meyer
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Goddard Flight Center
      Science

      NASA's Nighttime Maps Reveal Humanity's Impact on Earth

      Advances in how satellites image the planet’s artificial lights are helping scientists estimate global patterns of energy use.

      • Rebecca Boyle
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Monika V. Knul
      Science

      Scientists Can Now Pull the DNA of Ancient Humans Out of Cave Dirt

      The technique will allow researchers to study Neanderthals and other prehistoric people without relying on fossils.

      • Ed Yong
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Attila Balazs / MTI via AP

      Photos of the Week: 4/22–4/28

      Bats roosting in Israel, continued anti-government protests in Venezuela, Amazon’s glass spheres under construction in Seattle, ANZAC Day in Australia, and much more.

      • Alan Taylor
      • Apr 28, 2017
  • Culture
    • IgorZD / Shutterstock.com
      Culture

      The (Feminist) Case for Women's Happiness

      Jill Filipovic’s new book, The H-Spot, argues for a movement that de-emphasizes women’s equality—and focuses instead on their fulfillment.

      • Megan Garber
      • Apr 30, 2017
    • HBO
      Culture

      The Leftovers: Desert Trip

      In the third episode of the final season, Kevin Sr. tries to learn a song.

      • Spencer Kornhaber and Sophie Gilbert
      • Apr 30, 2017
    • National Geogrphic
      Culture

      Looking Back on the L.A. Riots Through Five Documentaries

      The glut of new films, marking the 25th anniversary of the unrest, are imperfect but panoramic portrayals of the events that shook the city and the nation.

      • Vann R. Newkirk II
      • Apr 29, 2017
    • Starz
      Culture

      American Gods Is a Gorgeous Mess

      The new Starz show, adapted from the 2001 book by Neil Gaiman, is extravagantly ambitious and frequently absurd.

      • Sophie Gilbert
      • Apr 29, 2017
    • Molly Berry / Turner / TBS
      Culture

      Imitation and Satire at the Not the White House Correspondents' Dinner

      Samantha Bee’s shadow version of Washington’s gala event was a perfect alternative fact of the real thing.

      • Megan Garber
      • Apr 29, 2017
    • Netflix
      Culture

      What Does a Girlboss Look Like?

      Two new television shows from 30 Rock alums tackle the subject of female ambition.

      • Sophie Gilbert
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Comedy Central
      Culture

      Why The President Show Might Just Work

      The new Comedy Central parody series is a late-night talk program hosted by the comedian Anthony Atamanuik, in character as Donald Trump.

      • David Sims
      • Apr 28, 2017
  • Education
    • Joshua Roberts / Reuters
      Education

      What a New Study on Vouchers Means for Trump's Agenda

      The administration has promoted private-school scholarships as a means of empowering families. But they may undermine a child’s academic success.

      • Leah Askarinam
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Glenn Gauthier / South Seattle College
      Education

      When a College Degree Isn't Enough

      Small-bite credentials are being used as supplements.

      • Laura Pappano
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Peter Nicholls / Reuters
      Education

      Where Are all the Preschoolers?

      Communities may have the funding to expand services, but they don’t have the data needed to target the right children.

      • Tara García Mathewson
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Darren Ornitz / Reuters
      Education

      The Case for Contentious Curricula

      Teachers should not shy away from addressing controversial issues in the classroom.

      • Jonathan Zimmerman and Emily Robertson
      • Apr 26, 2017
    • Rogelio V. Solis / AP
      Education

      The Racism in Math Education

      A new paper examines the ways “whiteness” reproduces racial advantages and disadvantages.

      • Melinda D. Anderson
      • Apr 25, 2017
    • Luke MacGregor / Reuters
      Education

      When Preschool Happens at Home

      A program in Boston helps new parents find solace.

      • Tara García Mathewson
      • Apr 24, 2017
    • Peggy Peattie
      Education

      Why Is the Student-Veteran Graduation Rate So Low?

      Community colleges recruit veterans and their GI Bill money, but student success is paltry.

      • Jon Marcus
      • Apr 21, 2017
    • Oliver Munday

      Mexico’s Revenge

      “The grandiose promise of trade is that it binds countries together, breeding peace and cooperation.”

      • Franklin Foer
      • Apr 18, 2017
  • U.S.
    • Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
      U.S.

      A Bipartisan Deal to Avert a Government Shutdown

      Congressional lawmakers could reportedly vote as early as this week on the more than $1-trillion measure.

      • Krishnadev Calamur
      • May 1, 2017
    • Kelly P. Kissel / AP
      U.S.

      Arkansas's Fourth Execution in 8 Days

      The death of Kenneth Williams marks the last in a series of lethal injections the state carried out before its execution drug expired.

      • Yasmeen Serhan
      • Apr 28, 2017
    • Kamil Krzaczynski / Reuters
      U.S.

      United's $10,000 Pledge to Bumped Passengers

      The airline issued a series of policy changes after a passenger was dragged off a flight.

      • Yasmeen Serhan
      • Apr 27, 2017
    • Arkansas Department of Corrections / Reuters
      U.S.

      Arkansas Carries Out First Back-to-Back Executions Since 2000

      The state administered lethal injections to Jack Jones Jr. and Marcel Williams, both of whom were convicted of murders two decades ago.

      • krishnadev calamur
    • Saul Loeb / Pool Photo / AP
      U.S.

      Q of the Week: How Would You Assess Trump's First 100 Days?

      Some think he deserves an A for effort. For others, it's more like “F plus a little bit.”

      • Elaine Godfrey
      • Apr 21, 2017
    • Reuters
      U.S.

      Police Say Facebook-Murder Suspect Steve Stephens Found Dead

      Authorities said he killed himself after a brief pursuit with police.

      • krishnadev calamur
    • Kelly P. Kissel / AP
      U.S.

      U.S. Supreme Court Blocks Arkansas Executions

      The ruling prevented the state from conducting the first of eight lethal injections scheduled to take place this month.

      • yasmeen serhan
  • Video
    • Video

      Oregon's Invisible Beauty

      A stunning time-lapse captures the landscape under infrared light.

      • Nadine Ajaka
      • Mar 31, 2017
    • Video

      Barack Obama Is Okay With the Criticism

      The former president explains what it’s like to be both a person and a symbol.

      • Jackie Lay and Ta-Nehisi Coates
      • Apr 10, 2017
    • Question Your Answers

      Since 1857, The Atlantic has been challenging established answers with tough questions. Here, Michael K. Williams wrestles with one of his own: Is he being typecast?

  • Events
    • PULSE: On the Front Lines of Health Care

      • June 13, 2017
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      From policy and economic discussions to global public health quandaries and the future biotechnology, The Atlantic will bring together the leaders and brightest minds shaping healthcare today.

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