Donald Trump's Great Escape

MELBOURNE, Fla.—After four miserable weeks of being locked up in presidential prison—starved of affection, suffocated by bureaucracy, tormented by the press—Donald Trump made a break for it Saturday.Touching down just before sunset here in the heart of Trump Country, the presiden … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump Returns to the Campaign Trail

After his first four weeks in office, Donald Trump left the the White House for Florida, where he soaked up the cheers of thousands of adoring fans. It has not been an easy month for Trump, with a federal judge blocking his travel ban, the resignation of his national security adv … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Do You Know ... About Animal Accidents?

Katie Martin / The AtlanticIn this week’s Atlantic coverage, our writers explored how humans collide with nature, what scientists can learn from genealogy, the technology for spreading bad news, what Americans think about universal health care, the history of an overlooked space, … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

'Before, Putin Was Unpredictable; Now It's Trump'

Well, that didn’t last long. As President Donald Trump wrapped up his fourth week in office, the romance between him and Russian president Vladimir Putin seemed to have cooled suddenly. The week began with the resignation of National Security Adviser Michael Flynn amid revelation … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Americans at Work: The Gig Economy

This week, our “Americans at Work” photo essay features photographs of the everyday lives of millennial freelancers living in Los Angeles made by photographer Jessica Chou: “A full-time job with one employer has been the norm for decades, but in recent years, the gig economy has … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 18, 2017

—Trump’s first four weeks in office have been marked by leaks, the resignation of his national security advisor, and general tumult, but Saturday he’s leaving the White House for a campaign-trail rally in central Florida.—At least two people have died in Southern California, wher … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Stuck in an American Retail Job With a Foreign MBA

Coming to the U.S. can knock immigrants’ careers off track for years. For new arrivals, integration is often an important part of achieving financial stability, as studies of upward and downward economic mobility have documented.Deepak Singh grew up in northern India. He had a ba … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Would Immortality Change the Way We Live?

Terror management theory, as Atlantic writer Olga Khazan explains in this video, posits that whenever you remind someone of dying, they try to manage their fear by regaining a sense of control. What would the benefits be to living forever, and consequently, not fearing death? Wou … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Fences and Fake News: The Week in Pop-Culture Writing

Why Fences Should Win the Best Picture OscarNosheen Iqbal | The Guardian“It’s theatrical cinema—the film is confined to a handful of backdrops inside the Maxson home and backyard; all the flourishes and drama unfurl from Wilson’s dense, poetic dialogue, a gift to both Washington … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Should We Die?

“So, you don’t want to die?” I asked Zoltan Istvan, then the Transhumanist candidate for president, as we sat in the lobby of the University of Baltimore one day last fall.“No,” he said, assuredly. “Never.”Istvan, an atheist who physically resembles the pure-hearted hero of a Sov … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Voter ID Laws Discriminate

For all the fervor of the current debate over voter ID laws, there’s a startling lack of good data on their effects. As of the 2016 election, 33 states have a voter identification law, with 12 of those considered “strict” requirements.After the 2013 Shelby County v. Holder Suprem … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Donald Trump’s Plan to Outsource Immigration Enforcement to Local Cops

Bed space was so hard to come by inside immigrant detention facilities across the country last fall that federal officials scrambled to rent out extra room in county prisons and jails. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Department of Homeland Security’s immigration-enforcem … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Long Arm of Marine Le Pen

The Quebec mosque shooting, in which six Muslims were killed on January 29, occurred in the context of a bitter debate over religion that has roiled the Canadian province for years. That debate reemerged one week after the attack, when some politicians in the provincial legislatu … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Republicans' New Plan to Gut Public Insurance

Medicaid has essentially functioned the same way for half a century. Eligibility for the program has changed, most notably when Obamacare extended an option to states to expand coverage to all low-income adults. But once they are enrolled, beneficiaries are entitled to guaranteed … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic Daily: The Memo and the Media

What We’re FollowingThe Fourth Estate: One of today’s biggest stories was the AP report—based on a leaked draft memo—that the Trump administration was considering deploying the National Guard to round up unauthorized immigrants.The memo was real, but the White House denied it, an … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Donald Trump's Loud Silence on Unions

Donald Trump traveled to a Boeing plant in South Carolina on Friday, ostensibly to poke around the company’s new jet and sit in the cockpit. But his real interest was the few thousand workers assembled in the hanger, and the television cameras behind them.“We love our workers, an … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic Politics & Policy Daily: Trump Blesses Boeing

Today in 5 LinesDuring an address at a Boeing plant in North Charleston, South Carolina, President Trump promised to “fight for every last American job,” and concluded his speech by saying, “God bless Boeing.” Trump will hold a rally at the Orlando-Melbourne International Airport … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Atlantic’s Week in Culture

Don’t MissOn Not Saying His Name—Elizabeth Limbach explores why the president’s critics have taken to talking about him without actually using the words “Donald Trump.”HBOTelevisionJohn Oliver Is Buying Ads on Cable News to Talk to President Trump—Megan Garber discusses the Last … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Fickle Career of an NFL Player

The chances that a high school football player makes it to the NFL are extremely small. In 2015, 23-year-old, D.J. Morrell was an offensive lineman for the NFL with the Buffalo Bills and felt like he had actualized a lifelong goal. However, Morrell was released before the footbal … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Seema Verma’s Austere Vision for Medicaid

It’s the confirmation hearing nobody was watching.Thursday morning, the Senate Finance Committee held a confirmation hearing for Seema Verma, the Trump administration’s pick to lead the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Though relatively breezy by confirmation-hearing s … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Q of the Week: Which President Do You Most Admire?

On Monday, February 20, we’ll celebrate Presidents’ Day. So this week, we asked our Politics & Policy Daily readers: What U.S. president do you admire most—and why? We received dozens of thoughtful responses, but here are a few of our favorites.For Dolores Oliver, the answer is G … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

NASA's Next Frontier Is Washington

Only one president’s name came up during the new Congress’s first hearing about NASA this week: John F. Kennedy.This makes sense. The House committee on science, space, and technology gathered on Thursday to discuss the “past, present, and future” of NASA, as the name of the hear … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Crashing Is an Antidote to Cynical Comedy Shows

“This is great,” says the comedian Pete Holmes, early in one episode of his new HBO series Crashing, which premieres Sunday. He’s talking to a group of fellow stand-up strivers who are about to spend the afternoon handing out comedy-club fliers to earn stage time for their own pe … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

100,000 National Guardsmen Mobilized to Deport Immigrants? The Anatomy of a News Cycle

Friday morning, the Associated Press dropped a bombshell report: “Trump administration considers mobilizing as many as 100,000 National Guard troops to round up unauthorized immigrants,” the new agency’s Twitter account announced.The hubbub that followed, as the White House denie … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The EPA’s Legal Nemesis Is Confirmed as Its New Leader

Scott Pruitt, the former attorney general of Oklahoma, was confirmed by the Senate by a vote of 52-46 to lead the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Friday afternoon, after a marathon all-night session in which Democrats held the floor for hours to oppose his nomination.The … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

'We Are Turning the Clock Back'

Luis Gutiérrez has seen this before.The unannounced raids. Reports that federal agents had detained immigrants who posed no threat, who had committed no crime, whose children were Americans citizens, who were not targets of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. A sense of con … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Steve McQueen's Unblinking Look at Life and Afterlife

The miracle of filmmaker Steve McQueen’s work is the miracle of not blinking. For 2008’s Hunger, he recorded a 17-minute uninterrupted shot of a tormented political dissident in Northern Ireland; for 2011’s Shame his camera stayed with a sex addict through every excruciating paus … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Photos of the Week: 2/11–2/17

Makha Bucha Day in Thailand, an overflowing dam in California, the Yanshui Beehive Rockets Festival in Taiwan, alpacas in Siberia, Beyonce at the Grammys, Carnival in Venice, protests in Romania and France, and much more. | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How a Trump Tweet Upended My Country's Politics

Since the inauguration of Donald Trump, Venezuelans have been scratching their heads, wondering how U.S. policy toward their country might be transformed under his administration. Up until this week, we had precious little to go on. Trump criticized the regime of Venezuelan Presi … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Have Conspiracy Theories Gone Mainstream?

Conspiracy theorists are on the national stage like never before, says Atlantic writer Rosie Gray. Alex Jones of Infowars fame is at the forefront. He’s responsible for propagating the widespread conspiracy theories that 9/11 was an inside job and that the Sandy Hook massacre was … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Jimmy Fallon Tries to Take On Trump

For the first time since he took a late-night hosting job in 2009, Jimmy Fallon seems on rocky ground. His Tonight Show, which has led in the ratings almost every week since he took it over, is suddenly falling behind Stephen Colbert’s Late Show. Fallon’s brand of celebrity and p … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump's Unnecessary Fight Over Israel

Thursday’s confirmation hearing for David Friedman, President Trump’s nominee to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Israel, started on an ominous note. Addressing those assembled, Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair Bob Corker warned that while in the past he had been successfu … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

‘Segregation Had to Be Invented’

CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Growing up here in the 1940s and 1950s, Sevone Rhynes experienced segregation every day. He couldn’t visit the public library near his house, but instead had to travel to the “colored” library in the historically black area of Brooklyn, a neighborhood that used to … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Disappointments of The Great Wall

It’s probably safe to presume that, had he known the political climate into which he would be dropping his debut English-language film, the legendary Chinese director Zhang Yimou would have chosen a subject other than the heroism of warriors defending an immense national wall aga … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Man Selling Giant Clam Shells to Fund a Menstrual-Cup Factory

It’s my second day at the Tucson Gem Show and I’m standing in front of the Expo Center, examining the fossilized shell of the world’s largest giant killer clam. It’s gray-white and smooth, with a lip that’s curvy and meandering, like a piecrust with a crimped edge.“Should I sit i … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Why Was a DACA-Recipient Detained by ICE?

Since President Trump took office last month, the future of 750,000 young people living in the United States under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program has become uncertain. On the campaign trail Trump vowed to repeal the Obama-era policy, which allows certai … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Bucharest Protests and a Sinking City: The Week in Global-Affairs Writing

Below DeckLizzie Presser | California Sunday“When Filipino cruise workers arrive in U.S. ports with U.S. crew member visas, American laws almost never govern their conditions on board. Nearly all cruise ships are registered outside the United States, often in Panama or the Bahama … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

What Can You Do With the World's Largest Family Tree?

Your family tree might contain a few curious revelations. It might alert you to the existence of long-lost third cousins. It might tell you your 10-times-great-grandfather once bought a chunk of Brooklyn. It might reveal that you have royal blood. But when family trees includes m … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

One Press Conference, Two Audiences

On Thursday, Donald Trump gave a press conference that was rife with untruths and evasions. Let’s begin with specific examples of demonstrable falsehoods, so that readers who are favorable to the president won’t have to trust my characterization:Bragging about all the electoral v … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Crackdown in Pakistan

Just hours after a deadly blast killed at least 70 people and wounded more than 150 others at Lal Shahbaz Qalandar Sufi shrine in southern Pakistan Thursday, the country’s military issued a series of tweets vowing “no more restraint for anyone.”Recent Ts acts are being exec on di … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Ranked: Useful Fictions in International Politics

“Lie” is the watchword of the early days of President Donald Trump’s administration. But not all lies are bad. In fact, the normal ebb and flow of international politics relies on a few agreed-upon falsehoods. Here are some of the useful fictions that make the world go ‘round.5. … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

How Concealer Covers Up Women's Labor

I started stippling concealer beneath my eyes around middle school. That was also when I began suffering from insomnia, which wrote itself across my face in half-moons the color of storm clouds.I bought little plastic tubes with built-in applicators, and as I brushed the wands ac … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

A Government Website for Kids Scrubbed Its Climate Warnings

Almost 20 years ago, the U.S. Energy Information Administration had an idea: Make an educational website for children about energy sources and the science behind them.In short order, the EIA created “Energy Kids,” which now features energy-themed Sudoku and crossword puzzles, col … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Donald Trump Will Defeat ISIS

The dysfunction at the highest levels of the American government right now obscures a dramatic reality: Donald Trump is going to defeat the Islamic State, and Americans need to be fine with that.Like most of the people reading this, I have been so completely absorbed by the drama … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Today's News: Feb. 17, 2017

—President Trump used a news conference Thursday to berate the media and rail against intelligence leaks. (More here) Meanwhile retired Vice Admiral Robert Harward, said to be Trump’s pick to succeed Michael Flynn as national-security adviser, reportedly turned down the job. More … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump Concedes Defeat on Travel Ban––For Now

The Trump administration told a federal appeals court Thursday it would rewrite its controversial travel ban targeting several Muslim-majority countries, effectively conceding defeat for now in the new president’s first major confrontation with the federal judiciary.In a 61-page … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

The Anti-Trump ‘Resistance’ in Red States

Massive crowds have gathered in cities like Washington, D.C., and New York to protest actions taken by the president since he took office. But outrage over the current state of American politics isn’t confined to liberal strongholds. Even in red states, frustrated and anxious vot … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago

Trump and Russia: Lessons From the Red Scare

Donald Trump has dismissed concern about undue Russian influence on his campaign and presidency as “fake news”—a fiction created by Democrats to explain away their defeat. Much of the news isn’t fake; it includes, among other things, a very real U.S. intelligence assessment that … | Continue reading


@theatlantic.com | 7 years ago