How a Strongman Made Himself Look Weak
Narendra Modi has picked a needless fight with the United States and Canada.
Narendra Modi has picked a needless fight with the United States and Canada.
Politicizing the U.S. armed forces won’t just hurt democracy. It will make the military weaker.
Black plastic spatulas, nonstick pans, and other Thanksgiving cooking worries
The meritocracy isn’t working. We need something new.
Wyna Liu, the editor of the New York Times game Connections, discusses her process and the particular ire her puzzles inspire.
New research points to a future in which pleasure and pain relief can be independently controlled.
Americans overwhelmingly—but, it turns out, mistakenly—believe that Democrats care more about advancing progressive social issues than widely shared economic ones.
Young people might be responding to a cultural message: Reading just isn’t that important.
Americans need to get off the tidiness treadmill.
The Atlantic has chosen 65 gifts for bringing more merriment, adventure, and wonder to the ones you love.
We wanted to address a systemic, gendered imbalance. It didn’t really work.
Chores are the worst.
The rot runs deeper than almost anyone has guessed.
Do I dare to eat an old peach yogurt? Yes, yes I do.
And can deciding to have kids even be a rational exercise in the first place?
A new Netflix documentary explores the cost of Martha Stewart’s chase for domestic perfection.
You don’t have to become a Buddhist monk to realize the value of contemplating hard questions without clear answers.
Democrats do not, in fact, face a choice between championing trans rights and completely abandoning them.
Minimizing gender disparities in house chores means reconsidering some deeply held societal truths.
For years he used fake identities to charm women out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Then his victims banded together to take him down.