The Law as Justice Gorsuch Sees It
In an interview with The Atlantic, Neil Gorsuch discusses his dream of a legal system that falls closer to the “golden mean”—not too much law, but not too little either.
In an interview with The Atlantic, Neil Gorsuch discusses his dream of a legal system that falls closer to the “golden mean”—not too much law, but not too little either.
An excess of restrictions has taken a very real toll on the lives of everyday Americans. Their stories must be told.
A coach reacts quickly to slow a dangerous fall.
Two decades in, there’s no evidence that school weigh-ins do anything but make kids uncomfortable.
So what if my screen time was up last week?
Bring back the 90-minute film.
Unfettered phone usage at school is hurting our kids and depriving them of connection. But it’s not too late to make a change.
The antidemocratic politics of having it all
Members of the French judo team celebrate Olympic gold.
Donald Trump is “getting people used to the idea that courts are politicized and can be manipulated.”
Air pollution is distorting the insects’ sense of smell and memory.
A collection of Atlantic articles on what makes athleticism a deeply human endeavor
The police finally found a real suspect in one of Hawaii’s most notorious modern-day murders—only to let him slip through their fingers.
When the site pivoted to entertainment, it put my loved ones in competition with ephemera.
A short story
Trap may be the director’s most unserious movie yet.
Do running mates actually affect presidential races?
A kayaker makes a big splash at the start of an Olympic run.
Tech firms have been spending historic amounts of money on AI—but will it pay off?