The U.S. Subsidy That Empowers Putin

Ending America’s foolish subsidies for ethanol could aid Ukraine. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Freeloading Boyfriends That Just Won’t Let Go

Male Santa Marta harlequin toads piggyback on their mate for months before egg meets sperm. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

We’ve turned schools into battlefields, and our kids are the casualties

We’ve turned schools into battlefields, and our kids are the casualties. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

How the West undermines its own sanctions

The Western sanctions in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have been far broader than many experts anticipated. But there’s a catch. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

We Have Reached a Hinge of History

Out of the righteous rage of this moment, perhaps a new world can be born. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Brittney Griner’s Plight Says More About America Than Russia

If the U.S. gave women’s basketball the respect it deserves, the WNBA star might not be in legal jeopardy. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

It’s Your Friends Who Break Your Heart

The older we get, the more we need our friends—and the harder it is to keep them. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

My Daughter’s Homework Is Killing Me (2013)

What happens when a father, alarmed by his 13-year-old daughter's nightly workload, tries to do her homework for a week | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

A Uniquely Perilous Moment

Smaller-scale tactical nuclear weapons could bring the great powers into a brutal, deadly, and unprecedented conflict. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Putin Is Being Canceled

And that’s a good thing. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Russia’s Economic Blackout Will Change the World

Like all novel experiments, the group punishment of Russia is a leap into the unknown. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The War in Ukraine Is Just Beginning

Conflicts, though typically started easily, can be brutal, intractable, and difficult to end. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Things I’m Afraid to Write About

Fear of professional exile has kept me from taking on certain topics. What gets lost when a writer mutes herself? | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Fight for Our Attention

We may live in an endlessly distracted world, but where we focus our gaze still matters: Your weekly guide to the best in books | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Congressional Republicans Have Found Their Red Line- The Atlantic

The GOP seems relieved to have bipartisan agreement—and to distance itself a bit from Donald Trump. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

What China’s Social Media Is Saying About Ukraine

Our analysis of online comments shows that pro-Moscow posturing is a veil for expressing a deeper critique of U.S. influence. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

What Does 'No First Use' Mean? A Nuclear Glossary

Here we are again, trying to make our way around nuclear terms and concepts as war rages in the middle of Europe. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Photos of the Week: Mud Bath, Sled Dogs, Ukraine Crisis

A flock of sheep in Paris, demonstrations to mark International Women's Day, an evacuated bear in Ukraine, skijoring in Colorado, a robot exhibition in Tokyo, and much more | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Myth of the ‘First TikTok War’

The world is viewing the Russian invasion of Ukraine with startling intimacy on social media. But how or whether this matters remains unclear. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Scenes from the 2022 Winter Paralympics

Images of the Beijing 2022 Winter Paralympic Games after six days of competition | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Adam Smith did not mean what he is often made to say

Adam Smith did not mean what he is often made to say. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Want to Understand the Red-State Onslaught? Look at Florida

Alarmingly restrictive laws continue to proliferate across much of the country. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

I Watched Russian TV So You Don’ Have To – On Russian TV Putin Is the Good Guy

According to Russian state TV, Putin is the good guy. Many Russians believe it. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

For the West, the Worst Is yet to Come

Perhaps the Ukraine crisis has saved the West from its pettiness and division. But the bigger picture is far more depressing. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Europe’s Sleeping Giant Awakens

Politics in Berlin has undergone a cataclysm that no one saw coming. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Globalism Is Good

Plus: The new push to price-gouge prisoners. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Winners of the 2021 World Nature Photography Awards

Some of the top images from the 14 categories of nature photography featured in this year’s competition | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Lost Origins of Playing-Card Symbols

Cards have been used for gambling, divination, and even commerce. But where did their “pips” come from? | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

China’s Russia Risk

How Beijing manages its relations with Moscow will help define it as a great power. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Putin’s Strategic Error

The Russian leader is creating the very Western alliance he feared. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Masking Policy Is Incredibly Irrational

Why must only the youngest children wear face coverings? | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Why Vaccine Cards Are So Easily Forged

Sometimes a little security theater isn’t the worst thing. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

How did this many deaths become normal?

The U.S. is nearing 1 million recorded COVID-19 deaths without the social reckoning that such a tragedy should provoke. Why? | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

USA Is the World’s Largest Oil Producer. Why Is Losing Russia’s Oil a Big Deal?

The U.S. might be “energy independent,” but it still can’t control production. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Food War

The food shock of 2022 is not a good-news story. But our “bad” is less bad than ever before. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Why ‘Mom’ and ‘Dad’ Sound So Similar in So Many Languages

The story of a strange linguistic coincidence | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

How Did This Many Deaths Become Normal?

The U.S. is nearing 1 million recorded COVID-19 deaths without the social reckoning that such a tragedy should provoke. Why? | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Key to Escaping the Couple-Envy Trap

Remember that even the partnerships you admire have periods of boredom, burden, or dissatisfaction. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Three Theories for Why Gas Prices Are So High

The White House can’t fix one of its biggest political liabilities until it figures out the problem. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Strategy That Can Defeat Putin

The U.S.-led coalition of liberal-democratic states should pursue three objectives. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

Why America Loves Love Is Blind The hit dating show is unsettling and relatable

The hit dating show is unsettling—and also completely relatable. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

There Are Many Things Worse Than American Power

Blaming U.S. hegemony for global problems has been easy, but Putin’s invasion of Ukraine offers a preview of a much more dangerous world. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Key Distinction That Helps Clarify the Path Forward on the Pandemic

We need to focus less on what individuals can do and more on what institutions can do. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Case of the Missing Black Hole

Astronomers have cracked a mystery 1,000 light-years from Earth. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

An Ode to Giving People Money

You won’t regret it. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Russian Elite Can’t Stand the Sanctions

The latest measures are far more effective than Western powers’ past efforts to target Russia’s elite. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The Weapon the West Used Against Putin

The way in which the U.S. disclosed intelligence ahead of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could drastically change geopolitics in the future. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago

The belief that a prosecution can solve a political problem is wrong

The belief that a prosecution can solve a political problem is wrong. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 2 years ago