What I Learned About Love When I Stopped Being Honest
After growing up in a family that never lied, I spent decades being off-puttingly truthful.
After growing up in a family that never lied, I spent decades being off-puttingly truthful.
Chatbots are saving America’s nuclear industry.
He said Republican politicians would be easy to break. He was right.
If we’re willing to see children terrorized because of a false rumor about Haitian immigrants, we should ask who abducted our conscience, not someone’s pet.
The first episode of We Live Here Now, a new podcast from The Atlantic.
The company’s bankruptcy filing is a reminder that being first isn’t always enough.
A conversation with Charlie Warzel about how the tech billionaire became a mouthpiece for MAGA
In a culture devoid of moral education, generations are growing up in a morally inarticulate, self-referential world.
The world’s time, to which all clocks are set, comes from small national labs. Ukraine’s is in Kharkiv, a city under fire.
The Darién Gap was once considered impassable. Now hundreds of thousands of migrants are risking treacherous terrain, violence, hunger, and disease to travel through the jungle to the United States.
I’m singularly focused on getting my husband and the rest of the hostages out of Gaza, the only way I know how.
Microbes may help determine our climate future.
But they were always at risk of developing diseases with potentially severe effects.
Investing in Rust Belt communities would not fix what they see as the actual problem.
In her new novel, Intermezzo, Sally Rooney moves past the travails of youth into the torments of mortality.
Diablo Cody’s movie has been reclaimed as a cult classic—and its destructive teenaged protagonist deserves reappraisal too.
An avoidable—and predictable—tragedy in Georgia
What Mark Robinson reveals about the GOP
How a relatively small subculture suddenly rose to prominence
Toothpaste that uses a newer fluoride alternative called hydroxyapatite works to fight cavities—but is scarce in the United States.