Get Ready for Higher Food Prices
Trump vowed to lower food prices. His policies will almost certainly do the opposite.
Trump vowed to lower food prices. His policies will almost certainly do the opposite.
Welcome to the slop era of online shopping.
The couch is there for a reason.
Speed climbing in Saudi Arabia, wildfires in California and New Jersey, a blanket of smog in New Delhi, a celebration of rural life in Turkey, Veterans Day in Seattle, and much more
Emilia Pérez is messy, excessive, and manipulative—and spectacular because of it.
It’s not just a phase.
In a culture devoid of moral education, generations are growing up in a morally inarticulate, self-referential world.
The same young people once derided as liberal snowflakes are moving to the right.
The satirical site’s announcement that it is acquiring Alex Jones’s Infowars created confusion—and perfectly captured the media world we’re living in.
Americans who care about democracy have every right to feel appalled and frightened. But then they have work to do.
The Infowars founder is already broadcasting his conspiracy theories on a new site.
Let’s call a crank a crank.
One of the worst maritime disasters in European history took place two decades ago. It remains very much in the public eye. On a stormy night on the Baltic Sea, more than 850 people lost their lives when a luxurious ferry sank below the waves. From a mass of material, including official and unofficial reports and survivor testimony, our correspondent has distilled an account of the Estonia’s last moments—part of his continuing coverage for the magazine of anarchy on the high seas.
The Israeli high command now sees all of its conflicts as elements of a single, multifront war with Iran.
Insurers are refusing to cover Americans whose DNA reveals health risks. It’s perfectly legal.
Trump’s ridiculous Cabinet nominations will provide senators with a new test.
In Lazarus Man, he rejects the tropes of contemporary literature.
Trump’s nominees share two main attributes: loyalty and loathing.
And what it means for the future of Palestinians and Israelis
For an evaluation of the most important novel to come out of Russia in many years, the ATLANTIC has turned to ERNEST J. SIMMONS, the author of LEO TOLSTOY and RUSSIAN FICTION AND SOVIET IDEOLOGY. Mr. Simmons was engaged in research work in Russia before World War II. He laught at Harvard and Cornell, and in 1946 he became chairman of the department of Slavic languages at Columbia, where he is also professor of Russian literature at the Russian Institute.