The Atlantic Daily
David A. Graham, Will Gottsegen, Tom Nichols, and colleagues guide you through today’s biggest news, ideas, and cultural happenings. Sign up for the newsletter here.
David A. Graham, Will Gottsegen, Tom Nichols, and colleagues guide you through today’s biggest news, ideas, and cultural happenings. Sign up for the newsletter here.
There’s one key lesson from two unrelated disasters, thousands of miles apart. Plus: Find joy in the very last pages of a book.
A new iron curtain is lowering. Here’s how that is influencing the cost of your groceries and your gas. Plus: America needs more wisdom.
International conflict, domestic politics, and the pandemic all entered decisive new phases this week. Plus: After you catch up with the news, check out the TV shows our writers are escaping into.
In our new magazine cover story, Mohammed bin Salman gives his first interview with non-Saudi press in two years. Then: Read our latest Russia-Ukraine coverage.
The U.S. is exiting COVID crisis mode. But are we moving in the right direction?
Vladimir Putin has upended the world order almost overnight—just not as he may have expected.
As the battle for Kyiv rages, we turn to Washington, D.C. Hillary Rodham Clinton argues that a radicalized Republican Party has played right into Putin’s hands.
Gas prices are already high. The Russia-Ukraine crisis threatens to further squeeze the global energy market.
As Vladimir Putin sets a Russian invasion of Ukraine into motion, the West is united in its response.
No matter your taste, and whether you’re observing it alone, with a special someone, or with pals, we’ve got an option for you to curl up with.
Donald Trump’s legacy as POTUS is still coming into focus, but one thing is clear: The GOP’s standards for presidential candidates have dramatically changed.
True satisfaction requires letting go, Arthur C. Brooks writes in our magazine cover story.
Will the big promises of Web3 and crypto ever come to fruition? Or will it all turn out to be a fever dream?
Coronavirus cases are, once again, dropping in the United States. But the virus isn’t done with us yet.
And scrambling domestic politics too.
Here’s what might happen if interest rates are raised.
We’re fumbling our way through another challenging January. Writers and editors from around our newsroom share the poems that they’re turning to this month.
Russia could invade Ukraine at any moment, the White House has warned.
As many Americans sit in a weird pandemic limbo, essential workers bear the brunt of the Omicron surge.
Our writers and editors share recommendations to bring you comfort, meaning, delight, or distraction—or a mix of all four!—this season.