
What Are People Still Doing on X?
Imagine if your favorite neighborhood bar turned into a Nazi hangout.
Imagine if your favorite neighborhood bar turned into a Nazi hangout.
For decades, Eve Baer remained convinced that her son, unresponsive after a severe brain injury, was still conscious. Science eventually proved her right.
A zoologist observed a Cooper’s hawk using a crosswalk signal as a cue to ambush its prey.
Republicans routinely criticized Democrats for rushing bills through Congress. Now that they’re in power, they don’t seem to mind.
On my first time out as a commercial fisherman, my boat sank, my captain died, and I was left adrift and alone in the Pacific.
The new Netflix miniseries Sirens has beachy vibes but a dark heart.
When interest rates outpace growth, very bad things can happen.
The Tesla innovator becomes the latest government employee to lose his job.
The president returns to West Point having transformed his relationship with the armed forces.
J. D. Vance could have brought the country’s conflicting strands together. Instead, he took a divisive path to the peak of power.
A new Supreme Court ruling shows how the American right has gone from fearing big government to embracing it.
RFK Jr. is prepared to rework the FDA’s official assessment of the abortion pill mifepristone based at least in part on a questionable report.
Cracks are showing in the U.S.-Israel alliance.
Inside the world of extreme-privacy consultants, who, for the right fee, will make you and your personal information very hard to find
House Republicans voted to advance a bill that would offer lavish tax cuts for the rich while slashing benefits for the poor.
What started as the adventures of a brilliant spy morphed into the mythology of an exemplary human being.
The human brain has a way of creating logic, even when it’s drifting from reality.
A manifesto left by the bomber of a fertility clinic demands refutation.
They thought they’d reached their journeys’ end. Now many of them have come full circle.
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.