
The Anti-Natalist’s Revenge
A manifesto left by the bomber of a fertility clinic demands refutation.
A manifesto left by the bomber of a fertility clinic demands refutation.
Israel’s limits on aid have put the region at “critical risk of famine.” Help is within reach. But it’s not enough—and it’s arriving too slowly.
The Israeli leader and his allies bet everything on Trump. But he’s just not that into them.
They thought they’d reached their journeys’ end. Now many of them have come full circle.
J. D. Vance could have brought the country’s conflicting strands together. Instead, he took a divisive path to the peak of power.
A swannery in southern England, tornado damage in Kentucky, drought conditions in the Florida Everglades, a rally race in a Chinese desert, and much more
A worrying pattern has taken hold in public television.
A lovely paradox of doing good in the world is that it does you good too.
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.
Donald Trump believes he’s invincible. But the cracks are beginning to show.
The person charged with attacking an American Jewish gathering and killing two Israeli-embassy aides disingenuously invoked the Palestinian struggle as a pretext to harm Jews.
Trump’s vandalism of the national-security structure, Signalgate, and a conversation with Susan Rice
The PKK is disarming. Can Turkey keep the peace?
The 1970s campaign fought to get women paid for their work in the home—and envisioned a society built to better support motherhood.
A new documentary revisits a pivotal week at Gallaudet University in 1988.
What happens when people can see what assumptions a large language model is making about them?
But when you promise the world a revolutionary new product, it helps to have actually built one.
A feature that lets you virtually try on clothes has a dangerous flaw.
How the president’s friend and golfing partner Steve Witkoff got one of the hardest jobs on the planet