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The Atlantic
.@petridishes imagines a very not-panicked note from the Graham Platner campaign:
.@petridishes imagines a very not-panicked note from the Graham Platner campaign:
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The Atlantic
The Atlantic
No Russian thinker has worked harder than Aleksandr Dugin to rationalize the invasion of Ukraine—but Dugin, along with many other Russian elites, has run out of cogent stories to tell, @shustry reports:
The Atlantic
The controversy surrounding the casting of Lupita Nyong’o as Helen of Troy in Christopher Nolan’s adaptation of “The Odyssey” says “more about today’s pathological understanding of identity than it does about classical antiquity,” @thomaschattwill argues.
The Atlantic
The hit movie “Obsession” dramatizes a particular kind of Gen Z anxiety spiral, Emma Stefansky writes:
The Atlantic
A January 6 rioter now has a top-secret clearance in the Pentagon. It’s the latest example of a dangerous trend in the Trump administration, Will Gottsegen argues in The Atlantic Daily.
The Atlantic
Canned cocktails such as Cutwaters have opened the door for more liquor to appear at sports stadiums and grocery stores—but some people “might not realize how much booze they’re really consuming” when they drink them, Nicholas Florko reports.
The Atlantic
Rich men have always manipulated society to maximize profits—but something else entirely is happening with today’s billionaires, Noah Hawley argues. He recounts what he saw during his weekend at Jeff Bezos’s Campfire retreat:
The Atlantic
Trump’s choice for acting director of national intelligence, Bill Pulte, is both terrifying and predictable, @davidfrum argues. : Kevin Lamarque / Reuters
The Atlantic
Pope Leo and other Christian thinkers have captured the gravity of the AI revolution in a way that many secular thinkers have not, @Tyler_A_Harper argues. : Matteo Giuseppe Pani
The Atlantic
In its finale, “Euphoria” tried to provide both a serious look at the opioid epidemic and an homage to action-Western tropes about good and evil—ultimately undermining the significance of its heroine's journey, @shirklesxp argues. : Patrick Wymore / HBO
The Atlantic
Terry Pratchett, one of England’s funniest writers, is in danger of being lost to history, @helenlewis writes:
The Atlantic
If you’re looking for a book that will make you feel deeply this season, Walt Hunter recommends “Bliss.” See the full list of all 25 books on our summer reading guide here:
The Atlantic
If we confuse generative AI’s ability to produce text with consciousness, we risk assigning moral responsibility to chatbots—and not to their makers, Ted Chiang argues.
The Atlantic
“You worked hard to earn your degrees and are now entering the job market, where I am going to do my level best to see that you are replaced by AI.” Watch Alexandra Petri’s commencement speech that 2026 grads will definitely not boo:
The Atlantic
“I still believe in the ideological ideas that underpinned the beginning of Twitter ... which is that the internet should be used as a medium of self-expression,” the former Twitter executive Jason Goldman tells Charlie Warzel. “And yet, what we actually have built—and what has
The Atlantic
Republicans once sacrificed a Senate seat on the strategic calculation that they were better off without a disreputable colleague—a choice that Democrats now face, @davidfrum argues.
The Atlantic
Eighty-two years ago, Allied troops landed on the shores of Normandy on D-Day. In our November 1960 issue, the U.S. Army combat historian S. L. A. Marshall wrote about the “epic human tragedy” that unfolded that day on Omaha Beach: