PEN America has canceled its annual festival after intense pro-Palestinian protest and existential conflict over its core mission.
Gal Beckerman on the true cost of dismantling an organization dedicated to defending free speech: theatlantic.com/books/archive/…
“I loved my mom more than my dog,” Tommy Tomlinson writes. “So why did I cry for him but not for her?”
Read more: theatln.tc/BT4PmrY9
Last week, David Frum argued that Joe Biden debating Donald Trump would be a dire normalization of Trump's attempted coup: theatln.tc/0UMUaIy1
Alexander Hamilton “was willing to set aside his tribal loyalties and support a man whose policies he vigorously opposed,” Charlie Sykes writes. “About 220 years later, Republicans face the same choice.” theatlantic.com/newsletters/ar…
These eight cookbooks are titles you will want to read front to back, writes Xena Worrier Princess. Each is written with care and enthusiasm, not just for the practice of cooking but for the experience of eating. theatlantic.com/books/archive/…
The invention of Ozempic may be as transformative as the development of insulin therapy was a century ago, writes gary taubes. That should make us very nervous: theatlantic.com/health/archive…
'Indian democracy has betrayed its people,' Ashoka Mody writes. The 'death by a thousand cuts of democratic norms raises the troubling question: Is India now an autocracy?' theatlantic.com/international/…
'Tom Cotton has never seen a left-wing protest he didn’t want crushed at gunpoint,' Adam Serwer 🍝 writes: theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
.Anne Applebaum, staff writer at The Atlantic, tells Walter Isaacson how U.S. aid to Ukraine will change the military and psychological dynamics of the war. “The Russians are… suddenly facing a much steeper uphill path,” she says.
“Ukraine won, Trump lost,” writes David Frum. “That may be a repeating pattern in the year ahead”: theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
The Supreme Court seems to be endorsing Trump's views on presidential power, Ronald Brownstein writes: theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
Young adults have found a new outlet for their existential stress: running a marathon, Maggie Mertens reports. theatlantic.com/family/archive…