Sweeping Ceres for the Building Blocks of Life

Scientists are discovering more ingredients for life on Ceres.For the first time, researchers have detected organic compounds on the dwarf planet, the second-biggest object in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. The materials contain hints of carbon and ammonia, the chemi … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Refugees Fleeing into Canada from the United States

Reuters photographer Christinne Muschi recently spent time at the end of a small country road in Hemmingford, Quebec, that dead-ends at the U.S.-Canada border, just across from another dead-end road near Champlain, New York. She was photographing refugees, traveling alone, or in … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Catholic Schools Saved by Vouchers

Catholic schools, once a mainstay for the Irish, Italian, and Polish communities in American cities, are struggling. With shrinking numbers of nuns as a source of free labor, and fewer parishioners passing the donation baskets on Sunday and enrolling their kids in parochial schoo … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Hans Zimmer Became a Rock Star

Like many other late-night hosts, Stephen Colbert introduces the musical acts that close out his show while holding their CD in his hands. His recent guests have included Japandroids, A$AP Mob, and Billy Joel, but Tuesday’s episode was a bit different: The album Colbert was promo … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump's New Pick for Secretary of Labor: Alexander Acosta

President Trump announced Thursday he is nominating Alexander Acosta as secretary of labor, moving fast to bounce back from Andrew Puzder’s failed nomination.Acosta, the son of Cuban immigrants, is an experienced former government employee, having served on the National Labor Rel … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Three Reasons to Reject Trump's Criticism of Intelligence Leaks

It’s a rare event when President Trump tweets approvingly of a journalist, but yesterday Eli Lake of Bloomberg View gained that unusual honor.Thank you to Eli Lake of The Bloomberg View - "The NSA & FBI...should not interfere in our politics...and is" Very serious situation for U … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Congress and Trump Won't 'Terminate the EPA'

It could not look more grave, more straightforwardly destructive. Below a simple title—H. R. 861, A BILL TO TERMINATE THE EPA—runs the staggering text:Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,The Environmental … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How The Blood of Emmett Till Still Stains America Today

What does American tyranny look like? In the past few months, fears about the collapse or degradation of the American democratic system have led many to engage in the grim exercise of game-planning the endgame of tyranny. For some, dystopian novels ground that exercise. Some take … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Music to Celebrate the 30-Something Blues

“Being in your thirties is like your teenage years, but without all the cool role models,” the Swedish singer Jens Lekman writes in the press notes for his excellent fourth album, Life Will See You Now. “When you were a teenager you had the Ramones. When you’re in your thirties y … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Failure of Race-Blind Economic Policy

After Donald Trump’s presidential victory, many left-leaning politicians and commentators started considering what sort of message would help them regain political power. Given the clear racial subtext to the 2016 campaign—Trump stereotyped Mexican immigrants and Muslim families, … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Hidden History of the Laundry Chute

In June 1998, while renovating his home in St. Louis, Joseph Heathcott found a collection of trash moldering in the slender cavity between his pantry and his laundry chute. It was a stack of small paper scraps “lying in repose at various scales,” with sooty edges that were just b … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Perils of an Unstable Executive Branch

Republicans understandably want to use the GOP’s control of Congress and the White House to pass the domestic agenda Paul Ryan has spent years crafting. If the executive branch wasn’t such a mess they could focus on that project with a clear conscience.Instead, Ryan and his colle … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Strike to Show What America Is Like Without Immigrant Workers

On Thursday, immigrant workers across the U.S. won’t be going to their jobs in protest of the immigration policies of the Trump administration. “A Day Without Immigrants” is meant to show what the country would be like without immigrants, with employees and employers giving up th … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Flawed Designs of Drug Trials for Autism

Taylor Stevenson’s family never left him out of conversations, but they never expected him to participate, either. His contributions, if he made any, were a few random words—gibberish or a Big Bird quote.So when Taylor started speaking his mind in his squeaky, sing-songy voice, h … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Donald Trump Changed Yale

Over the weekend, Yale President Peter Salovey announced that the university will give Calhoun College, dedicated to the white supremacist and fervent slavery supporter John Calhoun, a new name: Hopper College, after the renowned computer scientist Grace Murray Hopper.In the fall … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Do Some Trauma Survivors Cope by Overworking?

The link between traumatic experiences and the development of addiction has been well-documented. Edward Khantzian, who originated the self-medication hypothesis of substance abuse, writes that “human emotional suffering and pain” and an “inability to tolerate [one’s] feelings” a … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Abbreviated Career of Michael Flynn

When Michael Flynn resigned as Donald Trump’s national security advisor after serving in the post for 24 days—the briefest such tenure in history—he left an already chaotic national-security bureaucracy stunned. His resignation also left Washington’s largest special-operations co … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Often Do Airplanes Hit Deer?

Sometimes, when technology and nature collide, the results are awe inspiring. (Think: photos of distant planets, artificial hearts, deep-sea robots.)Other times, in more literal collisions, the results are that you have to make an emergency landing in North Carolina because your … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How a Million-Dollar Superwatch is Fighting Back Against Computing

At its heart, a mechanical watch is a fancy spring. A metal coil stores power when the crown is wound tight. A series of gears harnesses that energy in even increments. It spins a central wheel, whose oscillations are geared to turn the watch’s hands.Once gears spin, it’s possibl … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Hundred-Year-Old Fix for Razor Bumps

Each strand of hair that grows out of our bodies begins its life in a little well under the epidermis. From there, it journeys upward, stretching through a pore into the outside air beyond the skin, where it emerges, wanted or unwanted, for all the world to see.Sometimes, however … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 16, 2017

—The Wall Street Journal is reporting that U.S. intelligence officials kept sensitive intelligence from President Trump amid fears it could be leaked or compromised. More here —Authorities in Malaysia arrest two more people in connection with the death of Kim Jong Nam, the half-b … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Miss Manners on Rudeness in the Age of Trump

People are mighty touchy nowadays about how they are treated, and quick to condemn accidents or confusion as rudeness. Being pushed against someone in a crowded bus is as likely to inspire a loud denunciation as an accepted apology. Wedding invitations may be received as insults … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Federal Anti-Poverty Programs Primarily Help the GOP's Base

Even as congressional Republicans mobilize for a new drive to retrench federal anti-poverty efforts, whites without a college degree—the cornerstone of the modern GOP electoral coalition—have emerged as principal beneficiaries of those programs, according to a study released Thur … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Wall Street Journal's Global Retrenchment

Unhappiness at The Wall Street Journal doesn’t stop at the United States border. A slew of layoffs around the world, combined with uncertainty over the paper’s direction in the Trump era, have left foreign correspondents on edge.The Journal’s inner turmoil over its coverage of Do … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Formidable Checks and Balances Imposing on President Trump

Donald Trump wanted to start his presidency with the shock and awe of rapid change. Instead, almost everywhere he looks, he’s stuck in the mud of grinding trench warfare.Trump’s tumultuous first month has been an extended lesson in the limits of a president’s power—as well as the … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

China’s Artificial-Intelligence Boom

Each winter, hundreds of AI researchers from around the world convene at the annual meeting of the Association of the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. Last year, a minor crisis erupted over the schedule, when AAAI announced that 2017’s meeting would take place in New Orlea … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Should Jeff Sessions Recuse Himself From the Russia Inquiries?

Senate Democrats are calling for Attorney General Sessions to recuse himself from reported inquiries into contacts between former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn and the Trump campaign’s contacts with Russia, but legal experts also say that Sessions’ closeness to Presiden … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic Daily: Contact and Conflict

What We’re FollowingNetanyahu’s Visit: During a joint press conference today with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Trump said he wouldn’t commit to a two-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Instead, he said, “I’m looking at two states and one … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump Kicks Off His 2020 Reelection Campaign on Saturday

Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign was a work of virtuoso improvisation: Even though it seemed to be in permanent chaos, with frequent changes of leadership, perpetual gaffes, and a strategy devised on the fly, the Republican managed to defeat the elaborate, best-and-brightest, data-wo … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Strange Revelation of the Investigation of Alabama's Governor

Thanks for the appointment, governor: You’re under investigation.Those weren’t Steven Marshall’s words exactly, but that was the gist of his announcement on Wednesday a few days after Governor Robert Bentley gave him the promotion of a lifetime: He made the local county prosecuto … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic Politics & Policy Daily: Puzder, We Hardee’s Knew Ye

Today in 5 LinesPresident Trump condemned a report in The New York Times that claimed his associates had contacted Russian intelligence officials in the year before the presidential election, tweeting that it was “an attempt to cover-up the many mistakes made in Hillary Clinton’s … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Does a Reformed Racist Look Like?

Scott Shepherd is a former grand dragon of the Klu Klux Klan in Tennessee, but now refers to himself as a reformed racist. Shepherd’s troubled past includes witnessing violent physical beatings and plots to attack the government—and cheering them on. In this short documentary by … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Does It Mean to Have 'Repeated Contacts' With Russian Intelligence?

Tuesday evening, The New York Times reported that associates of then-candidate Donald Trump, including within his presidential campaign, had had “repeated” contact with Russian intelligence officials, and that American intelligence and law-enforcement officials had records of int … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump Shrugs Off the Two-State Solution

By most accounts, July will mark the 80th anniversary of the two-state solution. It was in 1937 that the British Peel Commission set about to understand why Arab riots had engulfed Mandatory Palestine. “An irrepressible conflict has arisen between two national communities within … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What the CRISPR Patent Decision Means for Gene Editing

The biotech trial of the century is over—for now. On Wednesday, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office decided in favor of the Broad Institute, which has been battling the University of California for the patent over CRISPR, a widely hyped gene-editing technique with applications i … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Democrats Want Answers on Trump Officials' Ties to Russia

Democrats on Capitol Hill want answers on who knew what, and when, in the wake of former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn’s resignation and reports that Trump campaign aides communicated with Russian intelligence officials.   On Wednesday, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Sc … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Why the Puzder Nomination Fell Apart

Updated on February 15, 2017 at 4:03 p.m. E.T. In the end, it wasn’t Andy Puzder’s track record on labor that tanked his bid for the job of labor secretary. Liberals were always unhappy with the Puzder nomination—his history of hostility toward labor regulations made him an unacc … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump's EPA Pick Is Poised to Slide Past a Lawsuit Into Office

President Donald Trump has a way with scandal. His biggest controversies are so huge, so ludicrously bamboozling, that they suck up much of the attention in the country. The smaller disputes facing  his staff can therefore slip by unnoticed. In his three-week-old administration, … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Game Theory

In his book Rules of the Game: Quiz Shows and American Culture, the communications professor Olaf Hoerschelmann suggests how neatly American game shows have reflected the times that produced them. The radio quiz shows popular in the 1930s and 1940s used “man on the street”-framed … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Happens Next Is Up to Republicans

The immediate question raised by the latest information published by The New York Times is: What next? Will Congress investigate? Will it subpoena records, including the tax records that may clarify the financial obligations—if any—Donald Trump has to Russia? And since Congress i … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Conservatives to GOP: Hurry Up and Repeal Obamacare

When it comes to the Affordable Care Act, Republicans in Congress right now are a bundle of nerves.As Obamacare’s supporters jam town-hall meetings across the country, GOP lawmakers in competitive states and districts are growing nervous about repealing the law without a replacem … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Are Deep-State Leakers Defending Democracy or Corroding It?

To paraphrase presidential candidate Donald Trump, somebody’s doing the leaking. But who, and why, and does it represent a defense of American democratic norms or a death knell for them?There’s no shortage of theories. Some of the damaging leaks are emerging from the White House, … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Scenes From the 2017 Westminster Dog Show

A total of 2,908 dogs were entered in this year’s 141st annual Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show, consisting of 200 different breeds or varieties. “Best in Show” was awarded yesterday to a German Shepherd named Rumor. Below are images from the two-day competition held in New York … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Ali Smith’s Autumn Is a Post-Brexit Masterpiece

What kind of art will come out of this moment? If Ali Smith’s Autumn is a harbinger of things to come, the work that emerges over the next decade will be extraordinarily rich. The novel, the first book in a quartet inspired by the seasons, considers post-Brexit Britain at the tai … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Are Teachers Becoming Obsolete?

Leaving my school building the other day, I had an unexpected realization: Perhaps a computer was a more effective teacher than I currently was. The thought unnerved me, and still does as I’m writing this. I’m a nearly 13-year veteran educator dedicated to reflecting upon and ref … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Was Obama Too Soft on Russia?

President Trump on Thursday appeared to suggest that his immediate predecessor’s Russia policy resulted in Russian’s invasion and annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014.Crimea was TAKEN by Russia during the Obama Administration. Was Obama too soft on Russia?— Donald J. … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Life, Times, and Departure of Bao Bao the Panda

The sign on the fence says, “Caution: A panda may be in this yard.” And as I peer through a glass panel, I see that it is accurate. There is, indeed, a panda in the yard.Her name is Bao Bao, and on this cold and windy afternoon at Washington D.C.’s National Zoo, she is prostate a … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Is the H-1B Program a Cynical Attempt to Undercut American Workers?

Each year,  in the first week of April, thousands of businesses enter an immigration lottery to win several of 85,000 H-1B visas, which are awarded each year for foreign-born workers in "specialty" jobs, often in technology and science.There are two classic ways of thinking about … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago