
Google’s New AI Puts Breasts on Minors—And J. D. Vance
A feature that lets you virtually try on clothes has a dangerous flaw.
A feature that lets you virtually try on clothes has a dangerous flaw.
The 1970s campaign fought to get women paid for their work in the home—and envisioned a society built to better support motherhood.
While many Democrats remained in denial, Mike Quigley perceived something painfully familiar.
Trump’s vandalism of the national-security structure, Signalgate, and a conversation with Susan Rice
The FDA’s new approach to boosters could mean that kids will no longer be able to get vaccinated against the disease to begin with.
My street got leveled by 150-mph winds. Why do I feel somehow at ease?
The 47th president seems to wish he were king—and he is willing to destroy what is precious about this country to get what he wants.
The Atlantic’s writers and editors have chosen fiction and nonfiction to match all sorts of moods.
Direct-selling schemes are considered fringe businesses, but their values have bled into the national economy.
Americans need to get off the tidiness treadmill.
To figure out who will benefit most, doctors should consider a particularly toxic kind of fat.
Three reasons why even wrongheaded or harmful ideas should not be censored
Final Destination has nailed down a formula that other horror films should learn from.
When children fall short, many parents’ instinct is to take away something they love. That’s the wrong impulse.
In 1965, the two intellectual giants squared off in a debate at Cambridge. It didn’t go quite as Buckley hoped.
I loved my mom more than my dog. So why did I cry for him but not for her?
A new book reveals how Big Pharma’s brazen behavior fueled medical mistrust.
The true story behind the chaos at OpenAI
President Donald Trump once promised, “I alone can fix it.” Now he has a different message.
Why have Republican leaders abandoned their principles in support of an immoral and dangerous president?