Catch up on The Atlantic with an editor’s selection of stories that will continue to spark conversations in the week ahead. Did someone forward you this newsletter? Sign up here. |
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| | (Photograph by Johnathon Kelso) | | | |
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| At a perilous American moment, the Shakespeare scholar James Shapiro explains why he wanted to read The Turner Diaries. | |
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| | (Illustration by The Atlantic. Sources: Rick Friedman / Getty; subjug / Getty.) | | | |
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| Welcome to the era of late-stage conspiracism. | |
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| | (Illustration by The Atlantic. Source: Kevin Lamarque / Reuters.) | | | |
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| A conversation with Julie K. Brown, the investigative reporter who knows more than almost anyone else about Jeffrey Epstein | |
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| | (Photo-illustration by The Atlantic. Sources: Chip Somodevilla / Getty; Drew Angerer / Getty; Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / AP.) | | | |
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| Justices Kagan, Jackson, and Sotomayor aren’t merely disagreeing with the majority’s technical readings of the law. | |
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| | (Photo-illustration by The Atlantic. Sources: Rick Friedman / AFP / Getty; Erica Denhoff / Icon Sportswire / Getty.) | | | |
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| To fend off illiberalism from the White House, the university’s president also has to confront illiberalism on campus. | |
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