The Atlantic Interview: Yossi Klein Halevi
An Israeli author writes a letter to his Palestinian neighbors.
An Israeli author writes a letter to his Palestinian neighbors.
A new series from The Atlantic about technology and culture. Starting May 10.
John Dickerson joins Matt, Jeff, and politics writer Elaina Plott to discuss whether the job of the president has become impossible.
A conversation with former White House photographer Pete Souza on what it was like to be a fly on the wall of the Obama presidency.
Atlantic editors Matt Thompson and Kathy Gilsinan ask Syria expert Andrew Tabler to explain how the conflict has worn on for years and what the path forward might be.
The modern world provides a "petri dish" for fascism, the former secretary of state argues.
Alex Wagner discusses the American immigrant story (and her new book) with Matt, Jeff, and editor Adam Serwer.
After CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s testimony, are U.S. legislators prepared to regulate the social network? Should they?
The former host of NPR’s All Things Considered talks about the state of race in America.
David Frum joins Matt, Jeff, and Kathy Gilsinan to discuss how American democracy has fared under President Trump.
A white southern mayor confronts the history in his city.
Fifty years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. was shot and killed, and then America created a version of him that it could love.
In a society riven by party, class, and generational divides, do families stand a chance? Rebecca Rosen and Adrienne LaFrance join our hosts.
With industries concentrating and corporate influence growing, Derek Thompson joins us to debate the promise and perils of big business.
On being a black writer in America, facing down people who doubt your message and your right to say it
The power grab in China, the Iraq War fifteen years later, and the art of anticipating history, with James Fallows and Kathy Gilsinan.
A senator tries to write a gun law that everyone wants.
Black Panther, Janelle Monáe, Tomi Adeyemi, and the Afrofuturist explosion, with Adam Serwer and Vann Newkirk
If both men and women seem unhappy in the age of #MeToo, maybe there's a better way to create a just society.
The story of Benjamine Spencer shows a legal system that prefers naming someone guilty over figuring out who really is.