Parents of trans children respond to Jesse Singal.
The Atlantic convenes health experts to find solutions.
“It Is very hard to predict what is going to happen.”
Why is Pinterest blocked in China while Reddit isn’t?
The writer Matthew Stewart talks to Masthead members about his June cover story.
The challenges of covering and understanding a rising problem in America.
“It would remove the role of gender stereotypes, which can be harmful to men and women.”
Atlantic writers and editors discuss when to call out the president.
Rejecting members of MS-13 is the centerpiece of the president’s immigration strategy. But it’s not easy to tell who’s really in a gang.
Parents often want to pass on their political beliefs to their kids. These factors determine when that works.
“Read it. Then read it again, and again, and again."
Memorials can help people mourn. But they can also mire visitors in difficult emotions.
To leave out nationalism is to miss a big part of the story
An Atlantic journalist opens up his notebook
After Gina Haspel’s confirmation, we revisit the agency’s legacy of torture, and consider how agents make ethical decisions today.
“People just honed in on the picture of a child in a Yale t-shirt.”
Google’s new AI communicates like a human. Why does that matter?
The history of arms control talks has important lessons for the Iran deal. In archived transcripts, Soviet negotiators opened up about what they really thought at the time.
“With a powerful analysis of the problems of institutional racism before them, the government and the public moved in a very different direction.”
Who really represents Trump?