The Triumph of the January 6 Committee
Half a year after the House finished its work, the executive branch has taken the baton and started running.
Half a year after the House finished its work, the executive branch has taken the baton and started running.
Published in The Atlantic in 1995
A new documentary offers a complex portrait of Black transgender sex workers, with the snappy production values of a Quentin Tarantino or Spike Lee film.
What are boundaries?
The pleasure is tainted, because the likely result is Trump as the Republican nominee—with a real chance of becoming president again.
Nicole Flattery’s new novel shows that human nature hasn’t really changed, just our technologies.
Special Counsel Jack Smith has sounded the call, but voters must answer it if they wish to preserve American democracy.
And now he’s been indicted for it.
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The rest of the world has caught up—and that’s a good thing.
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Its most recent term was a credit to the institution, not the abomination its critics allege.
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The Atlantic’s writers and editors recommend titles to match some warm-weather moods.
His apparent stranglehold on the GOP race is both emboldening and hindering.
The platform’s new logo seems a little juvenile. So does the internet.
Recent images of foxes playing, scavenging, sleeping, and scampering around London
Light sparring might mean getting hit. But it has its own benefits.