
The Most Nihilistic Conflict on Earth
Sudan’s devastating civil war shows what will replace the liberal order: anarchy and greed.

Sudan’s devastating civil war shows what will replace the liberal order: anarchy and greed.

San Francisco is changing how it responds to homelessness and addiction on its streets—but people who need help right now don’t have the luxury of waiting.

Ever since he died, I wonder how we would have gotten along as adults.

A radical campaign that began in 2023 is entering its final phase.

He’s tried three tactics to change the subject, but they’re just exacerbating his problem.

Their threat to match Republican gerrymandering could be difficult to fulfill.

As plans for the festivities became Trumpier, allies of the president tried to oust Republican commissioners.

Children who were raised on screens need more freedom out in the real world.

Explaining away even the most horrific acts of violence by saying some people are just wicked is understandable—but it won’t help us build a safer society.

Are you a Myers-Briggs person, an Enneagram person, or something else? The Atlantic made a quiz to help you find out. (From 2023)

Virginia Woolf’s wild run of creativity in her 40s included writing her masterpiece on the terrors and triumphs of middle age.

American television is fair game for its critics, but think twice, says this student of TV, before you disparage The Friendly Giant, Misterogers’ Neighborhood, and Captain Kangaroo. (From 1969)

“Just where will this demand for conformity, for unquestioning loyalty, lead?” (From 1948)


San Francisco is changing how it responds to homelessness and addiction on its streets—but people who need help right now don’t have the luxury of waiting.

Tim Mak and Adrian Karatnycky on battlefield reality, stalled U.S. support, and why Ukraine won’t give up

There are authoritarian tactics already at work in the United States. To root them out, you have to know where to look.

Younger generations are having a hard time imagining their future.

A visit with Le-Ann Williams and her daughter, Destiny, 20 years after Hurricane Katrina