
A ‘Trump Class’ Folly on the High Seas
Ukraine sees the future of naval warfare. The White House doesn’t.
| CARVIEW |

Ukraine sees the future of naval warfare. The White House doesn’t.

The latest batch includes many new references to Trump—and enough ammunition for Congress to keep pressing.

It’s not just okay for some things in life to be hard—it’s essential.

It’s not just kids who can’t stop scrolling.

It is impossible to take her actions at face value given the context in which she is operating.

Race and gender aren’t the only categories that determine who gets special treatment.

Why it’s hard to watch the NBA’s most promising young talent


The Netflix drama’s final season settles for “compulsively watchable.” Is that all we get?
Salmon with Abraham Lincoln and Jesus, plus other hypothetical dinner parties from The Katie Miller Podcast

The white-supremacist influencer cast a shadow over Turning Point USA’s annual gathering.

When riffing, the president exhibits an unusual tell.

Watching it, understanding it, forecasting it, predicting how much water is in it—all of this is a surprisingly large and intricate undertaking, one on which our society urgently depends. (From 1995)




The Atlantic’s Helen Lewis on the Riyadh Comedy Festival, why comedians are attracted to conspiracy theories, and the rise of the right-wing comedy-podcast industrial complex. Plus: the importance of NATO and David’s reflections on Edith Wharton’s Autres Temps.

It’s not just kids who can’t stop scrolling.

There are authoritarian tactics already at work in the United States. To root them out, you have to know where to look.

Younger generations are having a hard time imagining their future.
Track the creative works that tech companies are using to train their large language models.
Search NowThe Atlantic Daily
Get our editors’ guide to what matters in the world, delivered to your inbox every weekday and Sunday mornings.