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Susan Tallman, a contributing writer at The Atlantic, is an art historian and the author, most recently, of Kerry James Marshall: The Complete Prints: 1976–2022.
GOP House leaders still can’t find a way to make the math of Trump’s tax bill add up.
Decades into their recovery program, black-footed ferrets still don’t have a clear-cut path to leaving the endangered-species list. Several mRNA vaccine trials found a debilitating side effect, and ...
If a savage beating, captured on camera, cannot produce a murder conviction, the chances of fixing the police-brutality problem are very bleak.
The blueprint for Trump 2.0 predicted much of what we’ve seen so far—and much of what’s to come.
The “Hands Off” protest in Washington, D.C., drew thousands of people with a lot of feelings—but as-yet-inchoate anger at the Trump administration.
In her response to Trump’s address, Democratic Senator Elissa Slotkin failed to capture the hallucinatory nature of our national politics.
Panelists discuss the president’s firing of the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General C. Q. Brown.
Senate Republicans have confirmed Trump’s least qualified Cabinet nominees—and given up their role as an independent check on the president.
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