Today's News: Feb. 14, 2017

—Mike Flynn resigned last night as President Trump’s national-security adviser, capping a tumultuous few days in which the former Army general was revealed to have discussed—despite repeated denials—U.S. sanctions on Russia with Moscow’s envoy.—Disney severed ties with Felix Kjel … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

This Beetle Bites an Ant’s Waist and Pretends to be Its Butt

Army ants are so vast in their legions, and so destructive in their appetites, that they have been billed as “nature’s Mongol’s hordes” and “the Huns and Tartars of the insect world.” The comparison in apt. But then again, neither Genghis Khan nor Atilla the Hun rode around with … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Construction on the Dakota Access Pipeline Continues, for Now

WASHINGTON, D.C.—A district court judge denied a request to halt the drilling of the Dakota Access pipeline on Monday. Construction of the 1,100-mile project will continue for now.The ruling adds another chapter to the convoluted legal history of the Dakota Access pipeline. The c … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Political Opening for Universal Health Care?

The Senate confirmed Tom Price as secretary of health and human services at 2 a.m. on Friday. After a contentious confirmation process, the Trump administration and the Republican-controlled Congress had finally installed one of the leading generals in its war on Obamacare in the … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Glue Helping At-Risk Students Stick With School

The percentage of students at Washington, D.C., public schools who graduate from high school in four years is at an all-time high. But at 69 percent, the district’s graduation rate is well below the national average, which is north of 80 percent.So in a move that mirrors a broade … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Resignation of Michael Flynn

Michael Flynn has resigned as national security adviser following reports that he misled senior Trump administration officials, including Vice President Mike Pence, about the nature of talks he held with the Russian ambassador in December before he took office.Flynn submitted his … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic Daily: Security and Songs

What We’re FollowingThe North Korean Missile: On Saturday night North Korea launched a ballistic missile while President Trump hosted Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at Mar-a-Lago. As photos posted by members of the club on social media later revealed, Trump chose to handle th … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic Politics & Policy Daily: Justin Time

Today in 5 LinesDuring a joint news conference with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, President Trump praised the “outstanding” trade agreement between the two countries. White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said Trump is “evaluating the situation” following reports that … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump's Performative Presidency

The most enduring image for the Obama presidency may prove to be the photograph that Pete Souza took of the president and his aides during the raid that killed Osama bin Laden. There’s no one reason for that—the moment was historic, the tension is engraved on the fences of the pa … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Sad State of Rock at the Grammys

It was a rough night for rock. Megadeath, the Grammy winner for Best Metal Performance, walked to the stage to the tune of “Master of the Puppets,” a song that’s actually by another band, Metallica. Before Metallica’s own performance, actress Laverne Cox introduced the band only … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump's First Major Foreign-Policy Success?

One of the more bizarre spectacles of Donald Trump’s young presidency came on Saturday night, when he stood with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe at a press conference called after North Korea launched a ballistic missile into the Sea of Japan. Trump let Abe speak first, standi … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Trump Could Get a Deal With North Korea

North Korea’s launch of a ballistic missile this past weekend likely signals the beginning of the end of a four-month respite from its testing of ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons. It’s nothing to lose our heads about, not yet at least. Assertions that this test poses the fi … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Is The Walking Dead’s Villain Killing the Show?

A strange thing happened after the gory, divisive, much discussed seventh season premiere of The Walking Dead last October: For the first time in the show’s wildly successful history, people stopped watching. Despite airing on the cable channel AMC, it had consistently been one o … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Homeland's Crisis of Conscience

In Sunday night’s episode of Homeland, Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) confronted a young American Muslim, Sekou (J. Mallory McCree), about a video he’d put online, violating the terms of the agreement she’d used to get him out of jail. Sekou had been set up by an FBI informant wh … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Two Shades of #Resistance at the Grammys

Did it say “RESIST” or “PERSIST,” the sparkly armband Katy Perry wore onstage at The Grammys last night? It wasn’t quite clear in the moment; intentionally or not, her sloganeering arm mostly stayed away from the camera. Social-media users scrutinizing screen caps of Perry eventu … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Democracies Lose in Cyberwar

“War is God’s way of teaching Americans geography.” This 19th-century quip, often attributed to the satirist Ambrose Bierce, deserves a 21st-century update: “Attacks against the U.S. are God’s way of teaching Americans how weaker enemies are stronger than they seem.”Osama bin Lad … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Federal Voting Agency Republicans Want to Kill

Every odd-numbered year since 2011, Republicans in the House have tried to kill the Election Assistance Commission—the tiny federal agency responsible for helping states improve their voting systems. None of their previous efforts made it very far, and with Barack Obama in the Wh … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A NASA Engineer Was Required to Unlock his Phone at the Border

Everything started to go wrong just after 5 a.m., when Sidd Bikkannavar scanned his passport, placed his hand on a fingerprint reader, and watched as the automated customs kiosk spat out a receipt with a black X drawn across it.It was January 31. Bikkannavar had just arrived at H … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Galentine's Day: How a Beloved Fiction Became a Beloved Tradition

It started as fiction. In a 2010 episode of Parks and Recreation, Leslie, creative and crafty and bursting with kindness for the people she loves, invented a way to do something American culture hadn’t traditionally been too good at doing: celebrating, in an official capacity, th … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Ta-Nehisi Coates on Asking Questions That Have No Answers

Atlantic writer Ta-Nehisi Coates has always been curious. “When I was a kid, I pretty much was interested in the same things I'm interested in now: Why does the world look like the world looks?” he explains in this short animation. Coates describes struggling in school and being … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Winners of the 2017 World Press Photo Contest

The winning entries of the 60th annual World Press Photo Contest ​have just been announced. The 2017 Photo of the Year was taken by photographer Burhan Ozbilici as the Russian ambassador to Turkey was assassinated right in front of him. This year, according to organizers, 80,408 … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Did the Oroville Dam Crisis Get So Dire?

Maybe the Oroville Dam was cursed from the start.In December 1964, three years into the massive barrier’s construction, a huge flood struck the northwest, killing dozens. The dam was nearly overtopped, which could have led to its failure even before it was completed. Instead, the … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Anti-Anti-Trump Right

Several weeks into the Trump presidency, one can divide the reaction among conservative commentators into three categories.At one extreme sit those conservatives who championed Trump during the campaign, and still do: Breitbart, Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham, Ann Coulter, among ot … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Answering Your Questions on Trump and the Rust Belt

(Editor’s note: Alana Semuels joined the TAD discussion group of Atlantic readers for an “Ask Me Anything,” and a lightly edited version of that Q&A is below. Reader questions are in bold, followed by replies from Semuels.)Hi Alana. Welcome to TAD and thank you for being here. I … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Donald Trump's Lost 1990s Websites

Donald Trump is a television and tabloids kind of guy.After all, broadcast and publishing platforms helped make him a star. Page Six crowned Trump the unofficial king of New York’s gossip pages in the 1980s and 1990s. The reality-TV craze of the 2000s ensured he remained a househ … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Surreal Trip to a Domain-Names Conference

If you’ve ever wondered what the peak of capricious financial speculation looks like, a domain-names auction might be a good guess. Imagine, dear reader, sitting in a darkened Las Vegas hotel conference room with maybe a hundred people, watching numbers flash on a screen as bidde … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Weed Weddings Are Now a Thing

Once Bec Koop had finished passing out joints to every wedding guest who wanted one, she waited until the bride and groom were ready to join the reception and then made her announcement: “Okay, are you ready to light up for the first time with them as a married couple?”The newlyw … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Adele, Beyoncé, and the Grammys' Fear of Progress

Set aside Adele splitting her Grammy like Solomon; forget, for a moment, all the pre-ceremony analysis about the awards’ fraught history with race and taste and tradition. Based solely on the performances last night, viewers would need to be arguing about Adele vs. Beyoncé—it’s h … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Mirrors Tell Us About Animal Minds

A couple of weeks ago, an editor at the Guardian tweeted an image of a bald eagle staring at its reflection in a body of water. “This photo of an eagle taking a hard look at itself is not a metaphor for anything that's been in the news recently”, he wrote.This photo of an Eagle t … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Scorched-Earth Acne Solution

For years, the cabinet underneath my bathroom sink was a graveyard of skin-care products, filled with the ghosts of face soaps, washes, toners, and scrubs past. Bottles of Neutrogena, Cetaphil, Proactiv, and Clean & Clear products were all laid to rest after my hopes that they wo … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

John Oliver Is Buying Ads on Cable News to Talk to President Trump

It’s become a truism of the weeks-old presidency of Donald Trump: If you want to reach the chief executive, and if you don’t happen to have the kind of sway that might get you a White House meeting or a golf game at Mar-a-Lago … no worries: Simply advertise to him. Buy some ad ti … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

'Every Racist I Know Voted for Donald Trump'

As a hobby, the black musician Daryl Davis persuades members of the Ku Klux Klan to defect from the organization. Over the years, he has spoken with hundreds of white supremacists. And due to his work, a couple dozen people have left the organization, including at least two promi … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Science That Could Make You Crave Broccoli More Than Chocolate

In a room filled with bean-bag chairs and crayon drawings at Philadelphia’s Monell Chemical Sciences Center, Nuala Bobowski doles out two shots of sugar water. One has the average concentration preferred by adults, the other a concentration preferred by kids. There’s a twinkle in … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Deconstructing the 'Liberal Campus' Cliche

Are American universities now spaces where democratic free expression is in decline, where insecurity, fear, and an obsessive, self-preening political correctness make open dialogue impossible? This was a view voiced by many at the start of the month, after the University of Cali … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 13, 2017

—A hole in an emergency spillway in the Oroville Dam prompted the evacuation of about 188,000 people in California. The threat from the dam has subsided, but it’s unclear when residents can return home.—Michael Flynn is still President Trump’s national security adviser despite la … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Donald Trump and the Art of the Apology

Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me.Honestly, has there ever been a stupider nursery school aphorism? Words can be plenty hurtful, excruciating even. Just ask  President Trump.  As has become evident in his brief time on the political scene, the 45th … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The 2017 Grammys: Winners and Performances

By the end of the 2017 Grammys, viewers will likely be arguing about one or more of the following: Beyonce, the Bee Gees, Donald Trump. In the meantime, I’ll be updating this post with the winners, remarkable performances, and memorable moments of the night.A number of awards wer … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 12, 2017

—World leaders have condemned North Korea’s latest missile launch, which flew toward the Sea of Japan. The test is being called a provocation to see how U.S. President Donald Trump responds.—Hundreds of passengers at Hamburg Airport were evacuated and dozens of flights were cance … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Saturday Night Live, Lobbyist

This weekend, just before Saturday Night Live began its show, a commercial aired on NBC in Washington, D.C. The ad featured a man in a home gym, lifting weights. “President Trump, I hear you watch the morning shows,” he said. “Here’s what I do every morning.” The camera panned ou … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Muslim Brotherhood and the Question of Terrorism

Is the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization? The Trump administration is reportedly considering an executive order designating the group as exactly that. I’ve struggled with how to respond to this question. Responding with facts, as researchers are rightly tempted to do, i … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Did Donald Trump Just Tweet?

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@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Solving the Substitute-Teacher Conundrum

Miss Frizzle is not a certified classroom teacher. Neither are Dora the Explorer or the bill in Schoolhouse Rock singing on the steps of the Supreme Court hoping to become a law. But that doesn’t stop these cartoon education tools from taking center stage on days when regular cla … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Equestrians of North Philly

For more than 100 years, the Fletcher Street Urban Riding Club has been countering crime with a love of horses. The non-profit, based in north Philadelphia, provides a safe environment for local teens to escape a community overcome by gang violence and unemployment. Photographer … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

An Unintended Side Effect of Trump's Border Wall

In their popular song “Jaula de Oro,” which translates to “Cage of Gold,” the famous Mexican band Los Tigres del Norte tells the story of a migrant who finds himself unable to move across the U.S.-Mexico border. His lack of mobility does not keep him in Mexico, as one would expec … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Do You Know ... About Cosmetic Costs?

Katie Martin / The AtlanticIn this week’s Atlantic coverage, our writers explored women’s war on body hair, the threats to bumblebees’ survival, Americans’ financial instability, the new rhetoric of climate-change denial, Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s career advice, and more.Can you reme … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Americans at Work: Working in the Cloud

This week, our “Americans at Work” photo essay features photographs of the offices of the cloud-computing company Rackspace in Texas, Virginia, and New York, made by photographer Trenton Moore: “We’d all probably be happy thinking that our data is stored in some magical cloud in … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 11, 2017

—A massive pod of pilot whales beached itself in New Zealand, and despite a huge volunteer effort to save them, more than 300 have died.—A 6.7 magnitude earthquake hit the Philippines and has killed at least six people.—We’re tracking the news stories of the day below. All update … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Whitney Houston and the Actor-Musician: The Week in Pop-Culture Writing

Whitney Houston Was Too Perfect to StayHanif Willis-Abdurraqib | MTV News“The message is that greatness can only be unexpected for so long before it becomes routine and pushes the great to some collapse. With Whitney, the first decade-plus seemed impossible. She was polished and … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago